If that doesn't work, try adding the shortcut you've made on your desktop as a non-steam game. I may have missed out a \ from the end of the Start In address (I've added it to the guide). ![]() Originally posted by MC Mjolnir:I'm so glad someone found this useful after 4 months of no comments ^_^ Open the command prompt, cmd.exe from the start menu. ![]() Tick the box that says Allow this device to wake the computer and Only allow a magic packet to wake the computer. Double click it and open the Power Management tab. Now open Device Manager from the control panel and find your ethernet adapter. If you can't find the setting, google it to find out and make sure it's supported on your board. From there, you need to look for a Wake On LAN setting, or possibly Power On By PCI Devices and enable it. Now not all BIOSes are the same, so I can't tell you exactly what you're looking for, but it'll probably be in the Power Management section or something similar. Press DEL (or whichever key it says on the boot screen) as your computer starts to enter the BIOS setup. (It's possible to do this if your host is connected wirelessly with some setups, but I won't be covering that in this guide.) The requirements are that your host motherboard supports Wake On LAN (WOL) and you have a wired ethernet connection to your host. Click on "Wake up selected computers" or tap "F8" on your keyboard.So here's a little how-to on managing your streaming host without touching it. Those with a green circle before the IP are currently running, and those with a red circle are turned off. ![]() They are listed by IP address and computer name. Turn on the computers on the program list later by opening the WakeMeOnLan program and clicking on each computer from the list you want to access. Then double-click the "exe" file to run the program.Ĭlick "File" from the menu at the top of the window and select "Start Scanning." The program collects the information from the other computers on the network during this scan. Open the downloaded file to extract the program files. Choose the "Power Management" tab on the far right of the window that opens and click to put a check mark next to "Allow this device to wake the computer" and "Only allow a magic packet to wake the computer." Click "OK."ĭownload WakeMeOnLan on the computer you want to access the other machines from. Right-click the "Network Adapter" from the list. Click the "Start" button in the lower-left corner of your screen and select "Control Panel." Click "System and Security" and then "Device Manager." Leave all the machines you want to be able to access turned on. Select a reason for the action and type a message in the field at the bottom of the box and click "OK."Įnable the ability for each computer you want to start up remotely. If not, click the check mark to erase it. If you want to warn users about the action, make sure a check mark appears in the box next to that option and select how long you want the warning to appear. Choose whether you want to restart or shut down. Type the names of the computers you want to shut down in the "Computers" field at the top of the box, pressing "Add" after each. Shut down machines remotely from any computer on the network by clicking the Start button in the lower-left corner of your screen, selecting "All Programs," "Accessories" and then "Command Prompt." Type "shutdown /i" (without the quotes) and press "Enter" to open the remote shutdown dialog box. ![]() Perform these steps for each computer you need to access remotely. Click "Apply" and "OK" to save the changes. Scroll down to "Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI)" and click to put a check mark in the box next to it. Click the "Start" button in the lower-left corner of the screen and select "Control Panel." Click the "Security" option and "Windows Firewall." Click "Allow a program." Click "Change Settings" at the top of the window. Click the small arrow next to Startup Type and select "Automatic." Click "Start," "Apply" and then "OK" to save the changes to allow remote access to the computer.Ĭheck the settings on the Windows Firewall if you use it before continuing. Scroll down the items in the services window until you see "Remote Registry." Right-click and click on "Properties" from the list.
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