F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks The connected laptop isn't working with the USB cable.

The connected laptop isn't working with the USB cable.

The connected laptop isn't working with the USB cable.

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B3457_Viper123
Junior Member
35
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM
#1
Using a Toshiba A500 is quite the story. The built-in Wi-Fi adapter only supports 2.4 GHz, so I swapped it out but kept failing after about fifteen minutes. I thought it was because I bought a cheap $12 adapter, but the original one still worked perfectly. Now I’m relying on an old S7 as a USB tether in a USB 3.0 port I installed into the express card slot—damn, those ports are gone. It’s functioning just fine. My latest speed test showed 80 Mbps, which is acceptable. I plan to get a new internal card soon, but for now it’s manageable. The issue is that I can’t cast from the laptop anymore. "No devices found." The Chromecast is working as I type this; the network is stable, all 18 devices are connected. Yet the computer’s IP has changed from 192.168.0.30 to 192.168.42.30—still on the same network, but the phone acts like a router, blocking direct contact. How can I work around that? Also, anyone got a Core Duo 9800 to share? (Or something similar with a 1600 MHz FSB and more than 3 MB cache)? Just asking.
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B3457_Viper123
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM #1

Using a Toshiba A500 is quite the story. The built-in Wi-Fi adapter only supports 2.4 GHz, so I swapped it out but kept failing after about fifteen minutes. I thought it was because I bought a cheap $12 adapter, but the original one still worked perfectly. Now I’m relying on an old S7 as a USB tether in a USB 3.0 port I installed into the express card slot—damn, those ports are gone. It’s functioning just fine. My latest speed test showed 80 Mbps, which is acceptable. I plan to get a new internal card soon, but for now it’s manageable. The issue is that I can’t cast from the laptop anymore. "No devices found." The Chromecast is working as I type this; the network is stable, all 18 devices are connected. Yet the computer’s IP has changed from 192.168.0.30 to 192.168.42.30—still on the same network, but the phone acts like a router, blocking direct contact. How can I work around that? Also, anyone got a Core Duo 9800 to share? (Or something similar with a 1600 MHz FSB and more than 3 MB cache)? Just asking.

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jonttutonttu1
Member
214
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM
#2
Technically, your device is linked to Wi-Fi, not a laptop.
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jonttutonttu1
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM #2

Technically, your device is linked to Wi-Fi, not a laptop.

H
Heranox
Junior Member
10
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM
#3
I can't help but think there must be some way around this though. The phone is basically acting as a repeater.
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Heranox
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM #3

I can't help but think there must be some way around this though. The phone is basically acting as a repeater.

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Prawnflakes
Member
204
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM
#4
Your laptop operates on another network segment. Your phone is behaving like a router, leading to a NAT problem. You’d likely need to configure port forwarding or set up a static route directly on the phone. It’s unlikely Android can handle this natively, so third-party tools would be necessary. I’m not familiar with any reliable apps for this task.
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Prawnflakes
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM #4

Your laptop operates on another network segment. Your phone is behaving like a router, leading to a NAT problem. You’d likely need to configure port forwarding or set up a static route directly on the phone. It’s unlikely Android can handle this natively, so third-party tools would be necessary. I’m not familiar with any reliable apps for this task.

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Velizar06
Posting Freak
865
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM
#5
This sounds doable. At the very least you've given me a starting point, and I appreciate that! I'll try a few things and be back when I have the result
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Velizar06
04-26-2024, 10:24 PM #5

This sounds doable. At the very least you've given me a starting point, and I appreciate that! I'll try a few things and be back when I have the result