You seem to have misunderstood. OP is asking about the wayland support of RX780M integrated graphics in newer amd ryzen processors
Sentau
Lemmy does not have push notification support. To enable notifications, 3rd party apps will have to make API calls to the lemmy API at regular intervals which would be costly for
- Lemmy as the api traffic would increase massively.
- For your phone battery as sync would keep running in the background and keep sending API queries
There isn't a list of communities you can pore through. You will find that feature from the official lemmy site of your instance though. On there you have an communities option(?) where you can see subscribed, local and all communities.
Voyager does have a very good search feature to search for specific communities.
No filters set as far as I am aware. I will try to link a video of the issue if possible.
Clicking expand does not work on my end though. When I click to the expand the comment, I get a 'no messages found' pop up at the bottom and the comment just disappears
There is this comment as well (not mine) which I cannot see/expand on sync but can on other apps.
Here I cannot click on the name or the dots to access your profile.
Once in the DM, I can access your profile by clicking on your profile name
I didn't think about this. Trying to access the profile before opening the message
Well thats confusing. I just clicked on your username and was able to access your profile and see your comment and post history. I also tried and succeeded in accessing a profile of a person from the chat screen. I assume that is what you want to access but can't. Maybe it's a PWA issue.
I can confirm that VP9, HEVC and H.264 encoding/decoding work when using the VA-API. Can't comment on AV1 hardware acceleration as my RDNA1 card does not support it but no reason why it should not work. Also keep in mind that in both fedora and opensuse, the official Mesa package does not contain the code needed for HEVC and H.264 encoding as these are not royalty free and hence have been removed in fear of a lawsuit. You can replace these Mesa installs with community packaged versions which have support for all codecs.
Arch, debian and other distros don't have this problem.
Edit : Regarding the browser support for video acceleration, Firefox and its derivatives, support can be enabled easily(but it's not enabled out of the box). Chromium supports it as well but I have not tried it as I use Firefox and have only dabbled with chromium