I checked my Network Connections and found out that I'm connected to a Remote NDIS internet sharing device. Should I be worried and should I stop using this connection? If so, how can I turn it off because it appears as an Ethernet connection so I can't disconnect from it.

*I live in an apartment so it could potentially it could come from other tenants

Hi, I have a weird problem with my Remote NDIS based Internet Sharing Device. I use a internet dongle through a USB port and it was working just fine until one day it decided not to start on its own with windows startup. So when i start windows the device won't connect itself and i see a red cross on the network icon in the system tray and i could find the adapter in network connections.


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"Remote NDIS based internet sharing device" used to be installed and working onto my Win7Pro computer (with erratic disappearances and frequent re-installations required). Now for unknown reasons this device no longer appears when my Jolla is connected through USB, so RNDIS driver couldn't be re-installed. Microsoft mysteries... Using wifi instead for now.

And I am facing Remote NDIS based internet sharing device,PCI Serial ports and PCI simple communications controller problem.Their drivers are not installing properly.I just want to use my mobile's internet in pc by using cable tethering.But its not working.I tried many method like driver update uninstalling etc but not working.

For e.g. - if right now it shows up :: Local Area Connection 3, Network 13, Remote NDIS based Internet sharing device ; the next day it will yield - Network 14 ...& hence forth for subsequent connection attempts !

It could also be due to the virtual network adapters that Windows creates (generally for things like network connection sharing with other systems and ad-hoc networks; feature no one actually uses, but Microsoft delusionally believes are important ). You can check this by going to Control Panel\Network and Internet\Network Connections (should be accessible by going to Control Panel, clicking on Network and Internet, clicking Network and Sharing Center, then clicking Change adapter settings on the left; at least that's where it is in Windows 7) and taking a look at the network adapters listed there. There should be one for every physical networking device in the system (i.e. wired, wireless/USB adapter etc.) and there may be one or multiple Microsoft Virtual adapters, each of which represents some function related to one or more of your networking devices and its capabilities for other types of connections (like peer-to-peer ad-hoc networks like using your personal wi-fi connection as an access point for other wireless devices to reach the internet and/or share files etc.). 9af72c28ce

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