I'm particularly amused by the pro-NVIDIA "it just works" comments. Compared to what exactly? With AMD, the 3D acceleration driver is bundled directly into VESA, so it's already ready & working before even the first-boot of almost all desktop distros. That's how drivers are supposed to work on Linux and it has taken NVIDIA 10+ years (and counting...) to get with the basic program.
I applaud the long overdue decision to move their proprietary firmware directly onto the card and making the rest of the kernel driver open-source, but I'll remind you folks of a few things:
The open source driver is still in an alpha with no timeline for a stable release
NVIDIA has so far elected to control their own driver releases instead of incorporating 3D acceleration support into VESA
NVIDIA had to be dragged screaming to go this far and they're still not up to scratch. There's still plenty of fuel left in the "Fuck NVIDIA" gastank.
Unfortunately, kbin instances are unavailable via Lemmy right now due to hosting problems on kbin's side of the equation (see Kbin Codeberg #101). This will probably be fixed soon, so keep an eye on that issue for progress.
Even if it were working, however, there's actually something of a required ritual that you'll need to go through when subscribing to an external community which your instance is not already federated to (i.e.: communities where nobody on SDF is currently subscribed). Here are the steps you'll need to follow:
In the community search, paste in the following pattern: !community@instance.domain (e.g.: !technology@beehaw.org)
Press [Enter], wait for the search to finish (it's normal to see no results)
Wait a few minutes
Refresh the search page and search for the common name this time (e.g.: "Technology")
The community should appear and be available for subscription now
FWIW: There are plans to improve this unintuitive workflow in the future (see Lemmy Backend Github #2951).
If these steps don't work, it's possible that the community may simply be too new. You'll sometimes need to wait an hour or so after a community has been created for it to start being available on external instances.
I'm particularly amused by the pro-NVIDIA "it just works" comments. Compared to what exactly? With AMD, the 3D acceleration driver is bundled directly into VESA, so it's already ready & working before even the first-boot of almost all desktop distros. That's how drivers are supposed to work on Linux and it has taken NVIDIA 10+ years (and counting...) to get with the basic program.
I applaud the long overdue decision to move their proprietary firmware directly onto the card and making the rest of the kernel driver open-source, but I'll remind you folks of a few things:
NVIDIA had to be dragged screaming to go this far and they're still not up to scratch. There's still plenty of fuel left in the "Fuck NVIDIA" gastank.