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daddytomato382016-02-16 14:16:09
laptops
daddytomato38, 2016-02-16 14:16:09

"Streaming" games from PC to netbook within the aisles of one provider?

The bottom line is this, my friend became disabled and now does not walk, sits at home and played tanks until a normal beech ordered to live long, right now he has a cheap netbook that doesn’t pull shit. Please tell me any solution how to stream video (And preferably sound) from my PC to his laptop via the provider's internals. The choice of software is not critical at all, although the program for remote administration, tried various variations of VNC, and nothing happened for a low update rate. I didn't find much information on VirtualGL and TurboVNC. help, while I'm at work, a friend can easily rape my computer =) it's always on anyway. at least have fun and not be bored.

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2 answer(s)
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Wheelie, 2016-02-16
@Wheelie

Steam has a broadcast feature.

T
TimsTims, 2017-01-23
@TimsTims

Yes, you can get a picture through Steam, there will be a slight delay.
But for this it is necessary that the broadcast packets are sent to the desired PC.
I did this - I set up a vpn connection to my home network, and on a weak computer I registered a route to the address 255.255.255.255 as a gateway, specifying the address of the home router.
On windows it is done like this: route add 255.255.255.255 mask 255.255.255.255 192.168.0.1
Where 192.168.0.1 is the address of the remote home router / vpn server.
How "home streaming steam" works: when launched on the client, it searches for neighboring PCs through a regular broadcast broadcast to the address 255.255.255.255 . Usually these are only the closest computers located on the same subnet (to the same router). By writing a routing rule through this command, we will ask the PC to send such packets to a specific address on a remote subnet.

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