Canonical, a leader in the Linux world, and hardware giant AMD have signed a massive partnership that will make life easier for AI developers. With the official announcement, AMD ROCm Ubuntu integration has been finalized. Thanks to this move, installing AI on AMD graphics cards now requires a single command instead of complex processes.
AMD ROCm becomes standard with Ubuntu 26.04
As part of this strategic collaboration, Canonical is placing AMD’s open-source software stack, ROCm (Radeon Open Compute), directly into the heart of the operating system. Starting with the Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release, ROCm packages will be available in the official repositories and will be continuously updated by Canonical.

The biggest good news for developers is on the installation side. Users who previously struggled with driver incompatibilities and compilation errors can now install the entire AI infrastructure simply by typing apt install rocm in the terminal. This will allow popular libraries like PyTorch and TensorFlow to communicate seamlessly with AMD hardware.
Canonical Creates an Open-Source Competitor to NVIDIA CUDA
With this move, Canonical is creating a strong alternative to NVIDIA’s CUDA dominance. While offering up to 15 years of support to Ubuntu Pro subscribers, these efforts are also planned to be transferred to Debian. Thus, AMD hardware will be treated as a first-class citizen for AI not only in Windows but also in the Linux ecosystem.
So, do you think this AMD ROCm Ubuntu collaboration between AMD and Canonical will affect NVIDIA’s market share? Share your thoughts with us in the comments!

