What the H-e-double-hockey-stick?
What the H-e-double-hockey-stick?
I managed to link my desktop PC to the laptop, which is helpful for online gaming. However, on the laptop running Ubuntu, I encountered an issue with Steam In-Home Streaming. Even after enabling it on the desktop, the Steam client on my other machine reported that no other devices with Steam In-Home Streaming were connected. I attempted to manually connect the desktop from 10.42.0.12 to 192.168.0.12, but it didn’t work regardless of the subnet. I then undid the changes and was able to stream YouTube again. Interestingly, this worked when my laptop connected to the desktop ran Windows 10. On Linux, the bridge was treated as a router instead of a direct connection, which caused the problem. What should I do to resolve this?
Are you asking about static IP addresses or routing configurations?
The diagram matches everything. Windows works well for various tasks, which is one of its strengths. However, I favor Linux mainly because it's lightweight and lacks data-mining features. *ahem* Overall, that’s what I aimed for on Linux. (Sorry for the delayed reply—I needed to back up my hard drive, and I was relieved it worked, since the old one didn’t show up in Windows or Linux.) And not even detected in other partitioning tools. So yes, I’m glad I did it. Otherwise, I’d have lost a significant amount of data!