The Following User Says Thank You to vaizki For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-01-30
, 05:34
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Posts: 213 |
Thanked: 27 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Detroit, MI
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to mooler For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-01-30
, 08:24
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Posts: 7 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#3
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2008-01-30
, 21:01
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Posts: 8 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ N.C.
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#4
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2008-01-31
, 02:01
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Posts: 2 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Jan 2008
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#5
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2008-02-03
, 21:39
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Posts: 76 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ Long Island NY
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#6
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The Following User Says Thank You to bg4 For This Useful Post: | ||
- There is just a lan-cable for access in my room
- There is wireless access but I have to pay $15-$25 to use it and then it's (of course) locked to my laptop MAC address
So I'm stuck with my N810 stranded from the Internet and I'd like to download Maemo mapper maps or do voip calls from it, maybe even listen to some internet radio.. Since my laptop is pretty much always on the hotel network, it should be a simple solution to share the paid-for connection of the laptop..
Well it doesn't seem to be easy. I've googled and searched these forums with no luck. Some of the ideas I have:
- When using wired LAN, configure the laptop wifi into ad hoc mode and run ICS to give the N810 dhcp + natted internet access. Problem is my laptop (IBM) has a quite handy connection management tool that doesn't allow this kind of 2 active interfaces config and disabling it and re-enabling is a horrible hassle. And configuring ad hoc mode just for a quick N810 download session is a painful experience. Plus this is not a general solution (need something different for when the laptop is connected via Wifi)
- When using Wifi internet, just associate the N810 with the same access point and manually configure the laptop as the default gateway. Then make some NAT trickery there.. how that would work in my Win XP laptop - no idea. And yet again not a general solution.
- Use the laptop as a Bluetooth network access point. It seems to support this but for some reason the N810 doesn't seem to? what gives.. this would be THE clean solution. Can I hack this from my N810 xterm? I can't even find hcitool (referenced on some 770 sites about BT hacking) on this thing.
- Use the laptop as a BT dial-up-networking device. My IBM bt stack actually supports this.. as long as I want to dial out with the on-board modem! So no luck here in the laptop simulating a phone with packet data and just terminating the PPP connection instead and doing some ICS magic.
- Ok the rest of my ideas are too wild to list publicly... Some of them include running Linux in a VMWare player and esoteric network configs..
So.. if anyone has any pointers to get me forward I'd appreciate it.
- Vaizki