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  1. Mhotspot Driver Problem Found

Jan 21, 2017 - 3 min - Uploaded by Tech Guru DailyDownload Driver and Software Windows 10 Driver Problem Solution. Find and download another like windows 10 hotspot problem fix driver problem found (5.49MB) file type: video mp3 mp4 3gp - fast download - bitrate: 320. Fix Wifi Hotspot Problem in Windows 10 Hotspot Device Problem Solution (Dell, HP, Lenovo). [ วิธีแก้ ] Driver problem found opening troubleshoot page [ mHotspot ].

I thought I would comment on this, even if it's a little dated. I recently had the same issue, trying to set up a network at the cottage using my cell phone data plan/4g network as my WAN and then distribute that connection to multiple computers. Yes, I went the route of hooking it up (tethered) to a computer and then sharing that connection via Windows 7 ICS using two NICs and dumping the shared NIC's feed into a hub via a crossover cable. It worked fine, but the the problem is, you can't file share with the machine running ICS.along with numerous other issues that are presented with Windows ICS, notwithstanding DNS. Then I decided to take a chance on this piece of gear: It works perfectly and is the perfect solution for those who want to create a WAN and share an internet connection to multiple computers using their smart phone or iphone as a modem.

Problem

You create a wireless hotspot on your smartphone or iphone, set the router to the 'Gateway' option which then sends the WAN feed to it's ethernet port. Connect the ethernet port to a hub.and you're off to the races. I've been using this for weeks now with no problems. I get 14 megs down and about 4 megs up with the 4g connection - it's faster than my cable service in the city. Regards, The Todd Man. Toddschick said: I thought I would comment on this, even if it's a little dated. I recently had the same issue, trying to set up a network at the cottage using my cell phone data plan/4g network as my WAN and then distribute that connection to multiple computers.

Yes, I went the route of hooking it up (tethered) to a computer and then sharing that connection via Windows 7 ICS using two NICs and dumping the shared NIC's feed into a hub via a crossover cable. It worked fine, but the the problem is, you can't file share with the machine running ICS.along with numerous other issues that are presented with Windows ICS, notwithstanding DNS. Then I decided to take a chance on this piece of gear: It works perfectly and is the perfect solution for those who want to create a WAN and share an internet connection to multiple computers using their smart phone or iphone as a modem. You create a wireless hotspot on your smartphone or iphone, set the router to the 'Gateway' option which then sends the WAN feed to it's ethernet port.

Connect the ethernet port to a hub.and you're off to the races. I've been using this for weeks now with no problems. I get 14 megs down and about 4 megs up with the 4g connection - it's faster than my cable service in the city. Regards, The Todd Man I have iPhone with jailbroken tethering capabilities, and a linksys router with DD-WRT on it, When you said 'Create a wireless hotspot on your smart phone, and set router to gateway option.' Was you implying that you should make a personal wifi hotspot with your iPhone & using that Asus Wireless Access Point first, and then put a router into gateway mode to share via cat-5 or AP? How do you set a linksys router running DD-WRT to gateway mode?

I'm trying to tether my iphone using any of the cydia tethering apps, and using my iphone as a modem to connect to a router. I would just use my iPhone, but I'm trying to get my PS3 video game console to have a open NAT Type of 1 or 2, I can't get it to have a open NAT type just using the cydia apps for some reason. It always comes up NAT type 3(or strict). So I'm thinking I have to make the iphone a modem and then connect it to a router some how thats in gateway mode and then connect it to PS3 and get a NAT Type 1 or 2, if the router is setup right and I have the right equipment. Do I need to buy a ASUS or D-Link WAP device first or can I do it with just a router and my iphone and a pc? If so how do I do this?

Thanks in advance. Mattmu said: I'm wondering if i use my iphone with usb tethering and get a female usb to male Ethernet adapter, plug my iPhone usb cable into my iphone and the other end into the usb adapter and plug it into the internet ethernet port on my router i could the my iPhone as a modem and power my routers internet? I was able to accomplish this finally, after much troubleshooting. Enable Personal Hotspot on iPhone (just stating the obvious). Acquire a Wi-Fi to Ethernet bridge or range extender with an Ethernet port; I used the Netgear WNCE2001 3. Connect a computer via ethernet cable to the wireless bridge for configuration. No matter what brand you choose, essentially you will need to locate the Wi-Fi network that your iPhone is broadcasting and connect to it.

You can leave the IP settings to automatic/DHCP because as far as I know, there is no way to specify custom IP settings that you want your iPhone to utilize for its wireless clients. Once the bridge is configured, connect the ethernet cable to the router that you would like to use (I'm using an AirPort Express). I forgot to mention that you may want to configure the router before connecting it to the bridge first, but essentially you will need to specify some manual IP settings for the WLAN/LAN side clients. This is because the router will see your WAN connection through the bridge, and through the iPhone's data connection.

In other words, your WAN connection will get an iPhone-assigned IP of probably 172.20.10.2 or something within that subnet. To avoid a subnet conflict with your client devices, you will need the router to dish out IP addresses within a different subnet (say 10.0.1.0, for example). Whether or not you have to manually set this up depends on the brand of router that you are using. With the AirPort, it's fairly straightforward as long as you tell the device to create a new network and then when connecting apple client devices, don't select the iPhone's personal hotspot because then you bypass the router and will not be able to see other clients (which means you cannot airplay or share files, etc.).

I use the above setup in a remote outbuilding that is constructed of steel. Even though there is a moderately strong LTE frequency signal outside, I have a five band signal booster installed using external directional antenna. It brings the two-way boosted signal (data and voice) into the building where it connects to a repeater antenna.

My iPhone connects to that to obtain the LTE connection for data. Then a few feet away is the Netgear bridge, which is connected to the AirPort via Ethernet cable. The AirPort sees the iPhone personal hotspot (172.20.10.2) as its WAN connection - it doesn't care that it's not a cable modem, DSL modem, etc. When you consider that continuity uses Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, plus add the signal booster that I'm using, and there is no doubt a lot of RF activity within the 700/800 MHz and 2.4/5 GHz spectrums.

Nevertheless, this is advantageous to me because my iPhone still has an unlimited data plan. And with a -60 dBm Signal, my broadband speeds are usually 7-14 Mbps down. Hope this helps - took me a while to figure it out but using the bridge is a simpler solution that I originally overlooked.

I was making it really too complicated. This can also be done even easier if you have tomato or DD-WRT running as your firmware as opposed to your stock firmware. All you have to do for this is disable the DHCP server on the router (most likely under LAN settings).

Then you would go into your wireless settings and change the mode to client-bridge. This will make the router use a wireless signal as it's WAN instead of the WAN port. You can also (if you need the extra port) make it so that the WAN port acts like a LAN port.

As far as getting the firmware on your router, that's something you'll have to look up yourselves on their respective sites. This lets you avoid getting an ethernet bridge as you are turning your router into exactly that. Its simpler than ever and works like a charm! I have a iPhone 5c iOS 8.3 and a D-Link DWR-116 '4G modem router'. Set up the router as a bridge, make your iPhone connect to your ISP and share the connection through USB (disable wifi and bluetooth), connect your iPhone cable to the USB-modem-port on the router, wait for dialog and select 'I trust this computer'. Now you can connect your other devices by ethernet-cable or wifi bridged through the router to your modem (iPhone).

Configure the D-Link router in Setup/Manual Internet Connection Setup as follows: INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE My Internet Connection is: 4G LTE / 3G Failover Internet Type is: Disable (n/a) 4G LTE / 3G INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE Diall-Up Profile: Auto-Detection Pin Code: I put mine there, but its probably not needed Reconnection Mode: Auto.and so on, down to the last line. Bridge ethernet ports: Enable Click 'Save settings', wait for a router restart, Click 'I trust this computer' on your iPhone, and. It may depend on your ISP and what kind of service you have, but if it is a modern and straightforward 3G or 4G it should work. Regards Alfred. Alfred Neuman said: Its simpler than ever and works like a charm! I have a iPhone 5c iOS 8.3 and a D-Link DWR-116 '4G modem router'. Set up the router as a bridge, make your iPhone connect to your ISP and share the connection through USB (disable wifi and bluetooth), connect your iPhone cable to the USB-modem-port on the router, wait for dialog and select 'I trust this computer'.

Now you can connect your other devices by ethernet-cable or wifi bridged through the router to your modem (iPhone). Configure the D-Link router in Setup/Manual Internet Connection Setup as follows: INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE My Internet Connection is: 4G LTE / 3G Failover Internet Type is: Disable (n/a) 4G LTE / 3G INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE Diall-Up Profile: Auto-Detection Pin Code: I put mine there, but its probably not needed Reconnection Mode: Auto.and so on, down to the last line. Bridge ethernet ports: Enable Click 'Save settings', wait for a router restart, Click 'I trust this computer' on your iPhone, and. It may depend on your ISP and what kind of service you have, but if it is a modern and straightforward 3G or 4G it should work. Regards Alfred Do you have any problems with getting disconnected? I had this setup at first but it would drop Internet connection after a couple of hours. I had to reboot the phone.

Mhotspot Driver Problem Found

I'm currently using the wifi tether option and it work great but my preferred way would be usb tether. Mattmu, I have the same question. My iPhone is not jailbroken, but I have some free 4g hotspot that can be used, and the speeds provided are faster than local ISP companies.

My current router is not able to be customized with open-wrt but I want to tether my iphone directly to the router. I do not want to use the wifi hotspot as the wifi is very congested where I live and as far as I know I do not get to choose which channel I want the wifi to be broadcasted from. Not to mention I get about a 30% loss of speeds and slightly higher pings over wifi. I've found USB tethering to be way more efficient than using the wifi hotspot.

I'm purchasing a female USB to male ethernet adapter simply to try it. I don't think it will work, as the router may need the necessary settings or software to know what is going on. Worst case scenario is that I'm out $6.00. It arrives today, so I'll update later tonight or tomorrow on my findings. I've been able to tether to my laptop on Windows 8.1 where I can bridge the iPhone connection with my ethernet port which provides internet to my router.

I've had success on Windows 10, but it's been quite buggy. However, I think it would be simpler to only have to plug the iPhone into the router. Instructions for bridging iPhone USB and ethernet connections are as follows: 1. Connect your phone to your windows pc, enable USB hotspot tethering on the iPhone. In the bottom right corner of the screen, right click the internet connection icon. Select 'Open Network and Sharing Center'. When the 'Network and Sharing Center' opens, click 'Change Adapter Settings' located on the upper right hand side.

From there, find your iPhone connection and ethernet connection. Ctrl click them to highlight both of the icons. When both are selected, right click, then select 'Bridge Connections.' If this doesn't work for you or you want to delete the bridged connections, simply right click the bridge icon that popped up (it looks like a router/modem), and select 'delete bridge.'

Apparently a Raspberry Pi can do a method similar to this one, basically bridging the USB and ethernet ports together. There are guides online, but I have not confirmed that they work. I have a Raspberry Pi lying around that I'll test it with if the female USB to male ethernet adapter doesn't work. Just a guess here, but I'm assuming a Raspberry Pi uses a lot less electricity than a full blown Windows PC. One last thing: A customizable router with a usb port should be able to do what we want.

For me, this is a last resort option because I'm a cheapass and I like my current router. EDIT: Received the female USB to male ethernet adapter today, it didn't work. Can anyone explain why this is? Could it work with an open-wrt capable router without a USB port? Edit 2: I've contacted the company that made the router I'm using, they say it depends on how the Iphone data transmission rules are. I'm not sure what this means. Upon contacting Apple customer service, they had no idea what the iPhone data transmission rules were.

They wanted me to specify further, but I don't fully understand what I'm asking in the first place. I'll ask the company who made the router for more info then contact my cellular service provider to ask about the data transmission rules, but I have a feeling they won't know what I'm talking about. I'm probably just going to try the Raspberry Pi method after I dig just a little bit deeper. Alfred Neuman said: Its simpler than ever and works like a charm!

I have a iPhone 5c iOS 8.3 and a D-Link DWR-116 '4G modem router'. Set up the router as a bridge, make your iPhone connect to your ISP and share the connection through USB (disable wifi and bluetooth), connect your iPhone cable to the USB-modem-port on the router, wait for dialog and select 'I trust this computer'. Now you can connect your other devices by ethernet-cable or wifi bridged through the router to your modem (iPhone). Configure the D-Link router in Setup/Manual Internet Connection Setup as follows: INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE My Internet Connection is: 4G LTE / 3G Failover Internet Type is: Disable (n/a) 4G LTE / 3G INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE Diall-Up Profile: Auto-Detection Pin Code: I put mine there, but its probably not needed Reconnection Mode: Auto.and so on, down to the last line. Bridge ethernet ports: Enable Click 'Save settings', wait for a router restart, Click 'I trust this computer' on your iPhone, and. It may depend on your ISP and what kind of service you have, but if it is a modern and straightforward 3G or 4G it should work.

Regards Alfred Do you have any problems with getting disconnected? I had this setup at first but it would drop Internet connection after a couple of hours. I had to reboot the phone. I'm currently using the wifi tether option and it work great but my preferred way would be usb tether. You are a legend! I bought the exact same rooter as yours for £34.99 on eBay and it works like a charm with my iPhone 5s. The unpleasant part is that my contract with '3 Mobile' will expire in 2 months so no more unlimited tethering!

But if anyone finds a way around it then it would be nice if you share it! Thank you very much! I have AT&T with hotspot and data plan. As long as you can setup any router with a Ethernet cable to access internet, you can use the computers USB port for the connection, bridge the wth created by iTunes and your Ethernet port for the computer, plug the cable into router, then connect to the wifi network using your wifi card on the same machine. Now you get file sharing and everything. Worked for me using a century link DSL c110z and my iPhone hotspot.

Now on the farm I have a full wifi network with the elite AT&T hotspot speeds, no throttling. Alfred Neuman said: Its simpler than ever and works like a charm! I have a iPhone 5c iOS 8.3 and a D-Link DWR-116 '4G modem router'. Set up the router as a bridge, make your iPhone connect to your ISP and share the connection through USB (disable wifi and bluetooth), connect your iPhone cable to the USB-modem-port on the router, wait for dialog and select 'I trust this computer'. Now you can connect your other devices by ethernet-cable or wifi bridged through the router to your modem (iPhone).

Configure the D-Link router in Setup/Manual Internet Connection Setup as follows: INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE My Internet Connection is: 4G LTE / 3G Failover Internet Type is: Disable (n/a) 4G LTE / 3G INTERNET CONNECTION TYPE Diall-Up Profile: Auto-Detection Pin Code: I put mine there, but its probably not needed Reconnection Mode: Auto.and so on, down to the last line. Bridge ethernet ports: Enable Click 'Save settings', wait for a router restart, Click 'I trust this computer' on your iPhone, and.

It may depend on your ISP and what kind of service you have, but if it is a modern and straightforward 3G or 4G it should work. Regards Alfred In the process of working this configuration, if you use a different router that is still 4G capable and with a bridge will that still work?

Alfred I have the same DWR-116 router but could not get mine to work with my iPhone 6s. I have a MoFi router and it will plu and play perfect. Plug in USB and it asks to trust and everything works beautifully. But when I plug in USB to the dwr-116 it never recognizes or asks to trust. What firmware version are you running on the 116?

Or do you have a custom firmware? Btw you said you put in your pin, what pin are you referring to? I know some USB and personal hotspot devices you get from your carrier come with a username password and pin, but I was unaware of that for iPhone. Even if tethering jailboken or native hotspot sharing. Thanks in advance. Digistyle said: Alfred I have the same DWR-116 router but could not get mine to work with my iPhone 6s. I have a MoFi router and it will plu and play perfect.

Plug in USB and it asks to trust and everything works beautifully. But when I plug in USB to the dwr-116 it never recognizes or asks to trust. What firmware version are you running on the 116? Or do you have a custom firmware? Btw you said you put in your pin, what pin are you referring to? I know some USB and personal hotspot devices you get from your carrier come with a username password and pin, but I was unaware of that for iPhone. Even if tethering jailboken or native hotspot sharing.

Thanks in advance On your iPhone, hotspot must be enabled in settings. If your carrier and/or data plan does not support this, then the hotspot option will not show up in the settings menu. In this case, you would need to jailbreak your phone and install TetherMe(what I use) or MyWi(I think it's called) in order to enable tethering. Without enabling the hotspot feature, no devices connected to your phone will be able to detect your phone's internet access. Personally, I use a TP-Link TL-MR3040 with OpenWRT installed that I configured to bridge the USB iPhone interface over to an ethernet port that I can plug into any router or computer. Edit I thought your MoFi was a hotspot that your were connecting to your DWR-116, and I didn't realize that it was it's own router connecting to your iPhone.

In your case, I would guess that the software drivers on the DWR-116 haven't been updated to support an iPhone 6, while the MoFi(most likely due to it's premium cost) has the latest drivers that do support an iPhone 6. Just a guess; you could always connect the phone to a Windows laptop with iTunes drivers installed, and bridge the iPhone network connection to the ethernet port, which you could then plug into the WAN port of any router. I know it's sloppy, but it works if you really need it. Got a close friend stuck in the middle of absolutely no where.

He asked this very thing after getting iPhone 7 with unlimited data thru AT&T. He'd like to tether his router to use his iP7 hotspot and share the internet connection to his 2 PCs. Laptop and Desktop. Would it be easier to just theather to his iP7? Or go the router tethering to iPhone. Anything new and the cheapest we can sort out for him would be the best.

Like a specific router that has the ability to tether to iP7 HotSpot. Thanks in advance. I'm wanting to connect my iPhone 6 to something in my car to broadcast wifi for my Android tablet. I'm doing this same setup in two cars and don't want to spend any money I don't have to.the problem is I haven't found an 'automatic' solution.

I found an app that runs in Windows and broadcasts a hotspot, but you must manually tell it to start. It's called mHotspot. I've emailed the company to see if they have a script for an 'autotether' when it's detected, or a script that can be run, but I haven't heard back. The benefit of this is that it can be used with every (I think) rev of iPhone, as the iTunes software will update the drivers when the phone is updated and then connected. My other idea was to use this with a LattePanda to minimize boot time and energy usage (instead of a full-blown computer), and it still runs genuine Windows 10, so iTunes and the drivers will work. Eccmvincent said: I'm wanting to connect my iPhone 6 to something in my car to broadcast wifi for my Android tablet.

I'm doing this same setup in two cars and don't want to spend any money I don't have to.the problem is I haven't found an 'automatic' solution. I found an app that runs in Windows and broadcasts a hotspot, but you must manually tell it to start.

It's called mHotspot. I've emailed the company to see if they have a script for an 'autotether' when it's detected, or a script that can be run, but I haven't heard back. The benefit of this is that it can be used with every (I think) rev of iPhone, as the iTunes software will update the drivers when the phone is updated and then connected. My other idea was to use this with a LattePanda to minimize boot time and energy usage (instead of a full-blown computer), and it still runs genuine Windows 10, so iTunes and the drivers will work. Not sure why you wouldn't just use the WiFi hotspot feature of the phone. While Windows is a nice OS for daily usage, it pretty much sucks for any embedded type of application like you are suggesting. Even if you did use Windows, driver updates wouldn't be an issue because the working set of drivers currently installed would continue to work without them having to be updated.

The drivers are actually seperate from iTunes, and as long as the driver were installed, iTunes is not necessary. Also, using a WiFi card as an Access Point(hotspot) under Windows is very flaky, and even then only certain wireless cards are supported.

As I stated above, I use my iPhone USB tethered to a router with a USB port, and certain routers can even provide the WiFi hotspot for you(mine doesn't have enough memory to do both tethering and WiFi simultaneously) if you can't just use the iPhone's built in hotspot. I actually use my setup in my truck, and have my router configured to provide a local hotspot for my tablet and laptop in my truck, while constantly watching for local free internet such as McDonalds or Walmart. When the router detects free WiFi(if I'm parked at Walmart or McDonalds, or my home or my friend's house) it will connect to the free WiFi and re-broadcast it over my hotspot instead of using the data on my iPhone. When I leave an area with free WiFi, my router automatically switches my hotspot's data source over to my iPhone.

Thanks for the quick response! There hasn't been much info that I've found regarding this challenge. The issue that I have is that in order to get the tethering straight from the iPhone (and connect to it with Android), is that I manually have to go into the hotspot screen on the iPhone. I have previously had it jailbroken so that I could activate the broadcast each time I plugged my phone into power (or it connected to my radio via Bluetooth), but have had to upgrade it to 10.3 for work and lost my ability to do so.

My concern with the '4G routers' is that from what I've seen, many of them tend to be locked to a specific iOS rev (many in the 6.xx range) and iPhone (iPhone 5 is the newest for some of them). Every time that you update your iOS, you MAY have to update the firmware on the router. If this is wrong, I will happily take that knowledge and apply it! I need something that I can just dock my iPhone in the car, and it starts the hotspot. It sounds like you have found a solution, so I'd love to know more!

I joined TG just for this particular thread, so I am not familiar with how all of this works. I did see some stuff about DD-WRT, which I've used in the distant past, but I am unfamiliar with it's use on equipment other than the generic Linksys home routers. Hitek146 said: Not sure why you wouldn't just use the WiFi hotspot feature of the phone. While Windows is a nice OS for daily usage, it pretty much sucks for any embedded type of application like you are suggesting. Even if you did use Windows, driver updates wouldn't be an issue because the working set of drivers currently installed would continue to work without them having to be updated. The drivers are actually seperate from iTunes, and as long as the driver were installed, iTunes is not necessary.

Also, using a WiFi card as an Access Point(hotspot) under Windows is very flaky, and even then only certain wireless cards are supported. As I stated above, I use my iPhone USB tethered to a router with a USB port, and certain routers can even provide the WiFi hotspot for you(mine doesn't have enough memory to do both tethering and WiFi simultaneously) if you can't just use the iPhone's built in hotspot. I actually use my setup in my truck, and have my router configured to provide a local hotspot for my tablet and laptop in my truck, while constantly watching for local free internet such as McDonalds or Walmart. When the router detects free WiFi(if I'm parked at Walmart or McDonalds, or my home or my friend's house) it will connect to the free WiFi and re-broadcast it over my hotspot instead of using the data on my iPhone. When I leave an area with free WiFi, my router automatically switches my hotspot's data source over to my iPhone. Jgerbracht said: Hitek146 - You said 'Personally, I use a TP-Link TL-MR3040 with OpenWRT installed that I configured to bridge the USB iPhone interface over to an ethernet port that I can plug into any router or computer.

' Can you give details on that.I have the MR3040 and installed OpenWrt on it-But nothing happens when I plug my iPhone into it. There is nothing on the config pages that gives me a option for USB-its just wifi or Ethernet-thanks. Did you ever get this resolved. I have also been trying to get an iPhone 6S connected to a Openwrt router using a usb connection. The openwork router can see the iPhone device connecting and disconnecting from the USB port but the iPhone never asks me to 'trust the device' nor does a USB0 ethernet device ever get created.

Any help would be much appreciated. Note: I have installed the following openwrt packages and rebooted.

Kmod-usb-net kmod-usb-net-rndis kmod-usb-net-cdc-ether kmod-usb-net-ipheth.