C&C Tiberian Sun LAN problem


Recommended Posts

I am attempting to play 'Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun' on a LAN. The game requires IPX/SPX protocol to run - I've verified that, along with the fact that the game will not play network games over TCP/IP.

My setup is this:

Computer 1: wireless network card, Windows XP, IPX/SPX installed and set as follows: Internal network number - 00000066 Frame type - Ethernet 802.2 Network number - 00000000

1.1GHz AMD processor

256MB RAM

Computer 2: wireless network card (identical to the one in Computer 1), Windows XP (same version), IPX/SPX installed and set as follows: Internal network number - 99999999 Frame type - Ethernet 802.2 Network number - 00000000

800MHz Intel processor

512MB RAM

-----------------------

The wireless network cards are Linksys Wireless-G PCI Adapter

Both computers are set to either connect to the internet via an infrastructure-mode setup through a router, or an ad-hoc network that connects only these two computers. Computer 1 can see and access shared files on Computer 2 in either case. Computer 2 can see Computer 1, but instead of shared files, it sees the task scheduler....

Within the game, it needs the following: network number, MAC Address (which I found and selected on both computers properly), and Socket Number (it allows a 5-digit number here, but I have no idea what it is or if it's necessary. I did, however, try putting the same number in for both computers, and this did not work).

I enter the LAN menu for the game on both computers, but they do not see each other.

I also disabled the QoS Packet Scheduler service for the network connections on both computers, following the advice I found on another site - this had no effect.

The full name for the IPX/SPX protocol is:

NWLink IPX/SPX/NetBIOS Compatible Transport Protocol

Either computer will run the game in single-player mode with no problems whatsoever, and have yet to suffer any lag.

I cannot provide the game's system requirements to run, as they are not stated in the manual, nor are they provided elsewhere that I can find.

Note - On Computer 1, the game was installed from the 'Command & Conquer: The First Decade' anthology DVD with all of the updates provided by the developers (Westwood, a great company which was sadly purchased by EA). On Computer 2, the game was installed via the 'Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun' CD's.

I would have been able to image the DVD to the 1st PC and use the DVD to install to the 2nd PC, but PC 2 has no DVD drive, which forced me to resort to the older CD's. I did, however, update the game fully via the auto-update feature to compensate - the anthology DVD already includes these updates.

**Please, no comments on how one computer has more RAM while the other has a faster Processor and 'why don't I put the best all in one computer?'

The RAM is of a different type in each computer, and I have no money to upgrade anything at the moment, so hardware will have to stay as it is.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/558657-cc-tiberian-sun-lan-problem/
Share on other sites

Okay, this is now officially solved.

IPX/SPX doesn't allow 00000000 or 11111111 as a network number - and that's what I had.

I also told the Windows XP firewall to let the programs through, and set all of the numbers to match each other while not conflicting with the protocol limits...

Geh, I wish it was TCP/IP. That would be so much simpler.

Oh well, I fixed it.

w00t.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Euro-Office must default to ODF to be considered "genuinely European", LibreOffice argues by David Uzondu Euro-Office is a web-based collaborative office suite that positions itself as a "European sovereign alternative" to American tech companies, backed by a coalition of developers including Nextcloud, IONOS, Abilian, BTactic, OpenProject, and, more recently, Tuta. The project officially went live a couple of days ago, but not before drawing heavy fire from LibreOffice developers, who called the marketing claim that Euro-Office represents the "first open-source office suite developed in Europe" a deceptive historical inaccuracy because projects like OpenOffice and LibreOffice existed decades earlier. Now that the project has launched, LibreOffice is back with another complaint, arguing that Euro-Office cannot consider itself "genuinely European" while it pushes proprietary Microsoft defaults on users. Euro-Office had promised to improve the OpenDocument Format (ODF) back in April, but the current release still plagues users with several technical failures. For instance, the suite lacks an admin setting to enforce ODF, and mobile editors completely block ODF saves, forcing files into Microsoft's OOXML formats. Some configurations force files into read-only mode, while editing frequently corrupts document formatting or erases data. LibreOffice thinks that merely supporting a format as an afterthought does not make you a sovereign alternative, as file formats are the battleground where" digital sovereignty is won or lost." The road to the first stable release of Euro-Office has been quite bumpy due to an aggressive public fallout with OnlyOffice, from which the coalition originally forked the project. OnlyOffice struck back by accusing the coalition of violating copyright terms under its AGPLv3 branding requirements by stripping the original branding anyway and forking the code. Getting Euro-Office up and running is a bit wonky (at least for non-technical users), as there is no direct installer to grab off the web. The easiest way we learnt is by using Docker. First, pull the official Euro-Office image from the GitHub Container Registry: docker pull ghcr.io/euro-office/documentserver:latest Then, run the container with active ports and a secure JWT token, enabling the test environment: docker run -i -t -d -p 8080:80 --restart=always -e EXAMPLE_ENABLED=true -e JWT_SECRET=my_secure_jwt_secret ghcr.io/euro-office/documentserver:latest And finally, open a web browser and go to the following address: http://localhost:8080 If you are running this on a remote server, replace localhost with your server's IP address. You will see the Euro-Office test page, where you can create new text documents, spreadsheets, or presentations directly in the browser. Image via Euro-Office Nextcloud promises that proper standalone desktop versions and mobile apps will arrive in a future release.
    • It’s any of their products not just windows.
    • Google Gemini has been failing for users across the United States, Europe, and Asia since early Wednesday morning, June 10, 2026, and more than six hours into the incident Google has yet to declare a fix............. https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318152/20260610/google-gemini-outage-tops-six-hours-errors-1076-1099-worldwideflash-lite-still-answers.htm
    • Fun fact: There are more Warhammer 40k games than there are stars in the universe.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Jim Dugan earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Tommi118 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      sjbousquet earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      sjbousquet earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      486
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      197
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      155
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      83
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!