GNOME Network Displays Adds Support for MICE, Chromecast
The latest version of the GNOME Network Displays app lets you stream your desktop to a wireless display using the Chromecast and Miracast over Infrastructure (MICE) protocols.
Both features had been in development for a while and were long-standing requests from many in the Linux community. To see both land in a the recent release of GNOME Network Displays 0.91 is great, and makes working with wireless displays much easier.
You can use GNOME Network Displays to mirror your screen or create a virtual screen.
MICE support has been tested to stream a GNOME desktop to an LG WebOS smart TV through ethernet and Wi-Fi over LAN rather than WiFi Direct. MICE works better with older wireless hardware and, as it uses existing connections, speeds up the time to stream and offers a more stable stream.