How To: Turn Your Windows XP Laptop Into a Mobile WiFi Hotspot

If your laptop has installed with Microsoft Windows XP operating system and Wi-Fi connectivity, it’s not difficult to share a wireless connection or an Ethernet connection. By wireless we mean a built-internal WLAN(Wireless Local Area Network) or external modem connection to your data network provider.Note that these are steps involved for only Windows XP operating system.

WEP stands for “Wired Equivalent Privacy.” It is not strong encryption, and it is easily defeated. Why do we suggest it? Because it works with a wide variety of networking devices – older laptops and handhelds – and because it can use a five-character password. The password may be referred to as “40-bit ASCII” on some devices. Note also that ad-hoc networks are intended to be networks of convenience, or temporary. If you have a more permanent need to share an Internet connection, it would be better to purchase a Wi-Fi router.

The steps to share the wired connection instead of the wireless connection are exactly the same. Right-click your Ethernet connection in Network Connections, select Properties, click the Advanced tab, and check “Allow other network users to connect through the computer’s Internet connection. “ Note that Windows will only allow one connection shared at a time. When you enable Internet connection sharing on one, Windows disables sharing on the other.If connecting wirelessly, start up your wireless connection if not connected now. (Windows may have asked you to re-start the connection during the above steps. That’s fine.) If sharing your Ethernet connection, please hook up if disconnected.In either case, click on Windows XP Start, then Connect To, and then “Wireless Network Connection.” If this is the first run, it may spend some time looking for the network. It will be saving settings for the network that it finds, so subsequent starts will be much faster. Then it will display this dialog.Select your own network and click “Connect.” Next, it will ask you to log in to the network.The dialog will then tell you that you are connected to “a ‘security-enabled’ computer-to-computer network.” It will say “Disconnected” in the top-right corner until other parties connect. It will then stay connected until no other party is connected.

Your friends and colleagues should now be able to go to their Windows XP “Network Sharing Center” and find your new network listed under “Connect to a Network.” Tell them the password and they’ll be able to connect.

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Written by Tony on September 15th, 2008 with no comments.
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