PC receives 192.168.1.37
PC receives 192.168.1.37
Model is Uptech SW-116, it has “Uplink” port and 16 LAN ports. It also uses external power.
WAN and LAN1 ports on router 1 is used. LAN3,4,5,6 and Uplink ports are connected on the switch. (model is Uptech SW-116) Uplink is connected to LAN1 on router 1. Other connections go to wall. I disconnected other routers, problem persists.
First router has DHCP enabled with range 192.168.1.20 to 192.168.1.80. Second one has “DHCP Relay” enabled with relay server set to 192.168.1.2. Third router has DHCP disabled.
2nd router is used as a wireless AP, getting rid of 3rd router is exactly what I am trying to do.
Call me surprised.
oops thanks for correction
cries in out of date xanmod/no zen for fedora
Cabbage Pepper on top left
free cheats for apex on Linux
You gotta br kidding me. These people have no idea what kind of disservice they do to Linux.
That’s still there but it appears when you use apt, it’s not in .bashrc.
WSL: If your friend is a dev and needs Linux cli utilities, use this. Dual Boot: If your friend wants to daily drive Linux, use this. Shrink Windows NTFS partition within Windows then install Linux to blank space. Virtualbox: Testing ground for dual boot, your friend can familiarise themselves with Linux safely using a VM.
Meanwhile I mount the ISO, copy paste its contents to a ~150 GiB FAT32 partition on my HDD I used for backing up PS3 and then modify grub.cfg so GRUB can pass the correct arguments to Linux kernel.
Could you give more details? On which platform did this happen?
RPCS3 can run most PS3 games but Steam Deck may fall short in some of them. Recommended specs include 6 core CPU but Deck has 4.
Seal for Android is a solid client