I've tried wlan_kabel, which likes to segfault and stuff, after I realised google would tell me what to google. It took so long to set up wrong that I forgot I'd asked here, and it's time to sleep now anyway, so I can just wait until morning, as the office will be open, and I can get my proper wired networking then.
You're looking for a wireless bridge setup or a wireless access point. I tired that last year for me on Ubuntu, turned out pretty well. Just google how to set up a wireless bridge (or access point using linux) cause I can't remember what site I used.
(09-30-2014, 09:14 AM)pauldacheez Wrote: [ -> ]Also, not having a Wi-Fi card in any computer these days is kinda stupid.
wifi is gross, i only use wired connections.
The wifi at my college is unstable so I brought my own router to use with my small electronics, and use a wired connection to my laptop (also added security for me)
Dedicated wired network takes a while to set up for some reason, so I'm stuck with wireless a little longer. However, I've managed to get bridging set up. It would have been much faster had my googling last night simply told me it was part of the OS rather than something I'd need external tools for.
(09-30-2014, 09:14 AM)pauldacheez Wrote: [ -> ]Also, not having a Wi-Fi card in any computer these days is kinda stupid.
Welp, I hope you don't mean desktops along with laptops. My 1 Gigabit wired network connected to my stationary desktop is just fine without being connected via wifi.
Scenario: Windows users tend to like every odd version of Windows. This means that users will probably like Windows 9.
Microsoft Solution: Make all Windows releases even from now on.
Gotta love that logic.
(10-01-2014, 04:11 AM)MaJoR Wrote: [ -> ]Scenario: Windows users tend to like every odd version of Windows. This means that users will probably like Windows 9.
Microsoft Solution: Make all Windows releases even from now on.
Gotta love that logic.
I see no problem with this logic, ignoring the possibility of it backfiring horribly. That'll never happen, right?