You dont need internet to play lan games. And I've turned off windows firewall on both laptops and minecraft still won't find the game
When you are hooked together, make sure both computers show up on homegroup or in networking, so that it is proof you have connection.
From that, run an ipconfig and find your local IPs, and try direct connecting using those. It may help to disable wifi. You shouldnt have an issue past that.
Sometimes things do weird things. What this process does is just flushes your files to before you downloaded minecraft, and then by updating you get the most recent possible. Try it out, report back your findings.
I've been lurking this thread while it has progressed, and your issue has been... Intriguing, to say the least. What are your options for doing any of the following:
Doing a basic / factory reset on your hard-disk.
Upgrading GPU / APU to something more recent. 60-80$ can get you one to function minecraft at 60 FPS on High.
Upon reading the console you posted above, your game should have launched by all means. Nothing is in error in that log.
These forums are provided as is, and to get support you have to be deserving of it and friendly enough to work with people to get help. Speaking in a frustrated tone is acceptable, however acting as though everything we may even suggest has already been done, and doing so in a haughty and self-righteous tone will garner you no attention.
Understanding that you atleast know, how to establish a forge environment saves me time. This is going to be stupid, but there is a process we need to go through to make sure things are done correctly.
Check your environment flags for java, and clear them to your preferred defaults, or to none at all.
Uninstall java. Setting files are generally not deleted from cache when you uninstall a program.
Reboot.
Reinstall java. Decacheck that you have the most recent version, for your supported OS, close down any unnecessary processes, and install java. Dont forget to tell bing to go eat a cactus if it asks for attention.
Flush your %appdata%./minecraft folder.
Boot minecraft, patch to latest jar.
Report findings. If you can run in debug mode, and give us a readout, that'd be A+
You should be more than well enough equipped to handle 200 players.
As a rule of thumb, for default bukkit
4-600 MB for the server
100-170 per player
This is based on plugins running.
Sooo, some quick math for you.
24 * 1024 = 24576
24576 / 128 = 192
However, while this does not ram-wise give you 200 players, you have 8 cores, which can help mitigate pull. Additionally, this math relies on all players not being within view distance of each other, therefore pulling the maximum amount of weight they possibly can. You should be well set to handle these players.
If you begin having issues, look into a modification called Spigot. It can drastically decrease user load.
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Koan is bloody powerful. Serious vouch, I host a few off of them.
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http://www.mcportcentral.co.za/index.php?PHPSESSID=sggfc0abv8tkgopjfp8l4bu3c2;wwwRedirect
Additionally, the only way to know is to find out. Try it yourself on your home system.
Best of luck.
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When you are hooked together, make sure both computers show up on homegroup or in networking, so that it is proof you have connection.
From that, run an ipconfig and find your local IPs, and try direct connecting using those. It may help to disable wifi. You shouldnt have an issue past that.
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These forums are provided as is, and to get support you have to be deserving of it and friendly enough to work with people to get help. Speaking in a frustrated tone is acceptable, however acting as though everything we may even suggest has already been done, and doing so in a haughty and self-righteous tone will garner you no attention.
Understanding that you atleast know, how to establish a forge environment saves me time. This is going to be stupid, but there is a process we need to go through to make sure things are done correctly.
Check your environment flags for java, and clear them to your preferred defaults, or to none at all.
Uninstall java. Setting files are generally not deleted from cache when you uninstall a program.
Reboot.
Reinstall java. Decacheck that you have the most recent version, for your supported OS, close down any unnecessary processes, and install java. Dont forget to tell bing to go eat a cactus if it asks for attention.
Flush your %appdata%./minecraft folder.
Boot minecraft, patch to latest jar.
Report findings. If you can run in debug mode, and give us a readout, that'd be A+
Godspeed, friend.
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Aside from that, you seem to have an issue with the spawn point. Try loading the map in single player first.
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As a rule of thumb, for default bukkit
Sooo, some quick math for you.
However, while this does not ram-wise give you 200 players, you have 8 cores, which can help mitigate pull. Additionally, this math relies on all players not being within view distance of each other, therefore pulling the maximum amount of weight they possibly can. You should be well set to handle these players.
If you begin having issues, look into a modification called Spigot. It can drastically decrease user load.
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http://www.whatismyip.com/
See if that works
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Hope this helps.
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