Step 3: Download and install PDANet Desktop for PC in order to use PDANet+. You can go to download the PDANet Desktop for PC. If you need more help in installing PDANet+ or connecting to PDANet+ you can refer to this page:

Trying to find a WiFi hotspot to connect your laptop or netbook can be quite a mission at times. With PdaNet though, you can ensure you can always get your computer connected - using your Android phone. You just need to download and install the desktop client on your PC then follow the on-screen instructions. Note that you may have to download driver software if PdaNet doesn't recognize your device.


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Once you're done, install the PdaNet mobile client on your Android. Then, connect your Android phone using the USB cable, and your computer should pick up the data connection from your phone and be able to piggyback on that. An icon will appear in your System Tray informing you of the connection status. From here you can alter the settings in PdaNet, which include auto-connecting when the cable is attached, showing network icon when connected, and using Google DNS.

Now, pick the movie or TV show you want to watch, and your chromecast will only use your phones unlimited data which you are then streaming directly to your chromecast. To add free streaming music to your 'poor boys entertainment system', download Fildo apk and install it. Always use screen mirroring and you don't have to worry about draining your hotspots data. I decided to pay $7.99 US to upgrade my FoxFi/PDAnet & PDA Tablet to PRO, just so I could avoid the time limits of the unpaid version. You can always use the free version and just reconnect when you need to, but I liked the app so much, I opted to have no time limit disconnects for the one time reasonable fee. Why do you even need FoxFi/PDAnet for your hotspot? Easy. Because it also let's you tether your computer orepair laptop, or any other device for that matter, that supports Bluetooth. PDAnet let's you use your phones unlimited data to wirelessly connect your other things via a hidden Bluetooth connection that acts like wifi, but doesn't cost you hotspot data. Anyways, this is how I roll, for less than $70 a month!

To make sure your data and your privacy are safe, we at FileHorse check all software installation files each time a new one is uploaded to our servers or linked to remote server. Based on the checks we perform the software is categorized as follows:

There are some reports that this software is potentially malicious or may install other unwanted bundled software. These could be false positives and our users are advised to be careful while installing this software.

After couple of days of fight with drivers I found solution and applied it with success. As I supposed and wrote in one comment above, the problem was not in adb drivers but with drivers (esspecially usb driver) installation. Shortly, to properly install drivers and run adb I need to clean cache drivers and rescan computer to rebuild driver information. I found description of similar problem here:

If Windows doesnt install them automatically go to device manager, uninstall all unknown devices and the ones with the yellow exclamation mark, then click in "check to see if there is any hardware changes"

The Proxoid Android app can tether your phone for free since it turns your Android device into a proxy server that your computer uses to make internet requests. Proxoid is free in the Android market, but to get it working you have to install the Android SDK or device drivers onto your computer, tweak some of the settings, and then configure your browser to use a proxy server

The pros of this method are that it's free and you don't need to gain root, so it's less risky. The cons are that you've got to install the Android SDK (something really only developers should have to do), and set your browser to use the proxy server each time you want to tether.

The app records information about the device it is installed on, including its [...] IMEI, the phone's model and manufacturer, and the phone number. The app searches the phone for images, videos, audio recordings, and files [...]

This is a tricky one. It goes without saying, but it's also a dangerous one. Attempting to circumvent these restrictions and getting caught doing so will potentially cause a lot of legal trouble. If they throw people in jail for refusing to install the app, I wouldn't want to figure out what they do to people circumventing the app restrictions. It is especially relevant because even experts in tech security have gotten caught by their governments despite extensive safeguards (the founder of Silk Road is a great example and is now serving a life sentence). Granted, evading this app is most likely a much less serious "crime", but the Chinese government isn't exactly known for lenience here. So while I would like to answer your question, please don't take this as me suggesting that you actually do any of this. I consider myself a tech-expert, but I still wouldn't do it.

There are some options for "dual booting" android phones. I don't have any examples to immediately link to (software suggestions are off topic here anyway) but there are options. If you can get your phone to dual boot then you can install the tracking software on one ROM and then do all your personal stuff on the other. You may need to put some basic information on the ROM with the tracking app installed just so you don't raise too many flags.

Of course there are still risks here: risks that they might reboot your phone and notice, risks that they might realize you have a completely different system installed next to the tracked one, and the simple risk that you would go out and about and forget to reboot into the "tracked" system, allowing a police officer to find and install the tracking app on your actual system.

You can bet that police keeps a list of people where the spyware has been installed (with device IDs), too. If no data comes in from your device, well, guess what. You'll be stopped again by police, and they will look very carefully why this isn't working.

This approach is stealthy and will not require an uninstall of the spyware app. There is always a risk, but in this case, depending on the data that is actually spoofed, the risk is minimal.

This happens in more places than just where you are, it's different where you are in that roving gangs force you to install the APP. In other places (including North America) they get by without using an APO and rely on other techniques.

This setup works best, if you can install the app voluntary at a time nobody is watching you configuring the security solutions. If you can only get the app when a policeman stops you, it is a bit harder to hide the security apps.

One method has been suggested by rooting the device, installing Xposed and corresponding modules of Xprivacy / XPrivacyLua. While I personally use this, rooting the device, managing additional risks due to unlocked bootloader and malicious apps gaining root access is yet another challenge - IMO beyond the scope of average user and hence easy alternative approach below

It allows you to install the app of your choice, in this case, your spy app in the work profile. Once it is installed on the work profile (by cloning) , it essentially is on an island and can't access any data that is outside your work profile (your photos, emails, SMS or any other app information). You can safely uninstall the original app and if police check, show them your app, which has a padlock icon indicating it is on your work profile. You can keep the app always in your recents or Overview and pull from there so that they don't even see the icon

However, this means that you install the app before police stops you and makes you install it. You can let the app download, kill the network connection while it's installing, and then remove permissions before it starts.

However, I've been informed (see comments below) that even if this led to it being documented that someone else had removed the spyware, the person would likely still get in deep trouble when it was noticed that the spyware was no longer installed. It sounds like the answer to the question, "Is there any excuse for not having the spyware installed that would be considered valid?" is 'NO!' So it wouldn't matter whether the factory reset is more effective at wiping the system than the spyware is at staying installed. I would say don't risk it, especially if you think you'd make a high-value target.

So my answer is that secretly helping to evangelize, build or crowdfund efforts to make it not work or prove it doesn't work well or to break it or make the phone to appear broken when spies try to install spyware would be better than a more direct approach, which would paint a target on your back. Good luck, and may the force be with you. ff782bc1db

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