Windows 10 and Windows 11 both have built-in features that can turn your laptop (or desktop) into a wireless hotspot, allowing other devices to connect to it and share your internet connection. Here's how the whole thing works.

Let's say your phone doesn't get good Wi-Fi reception when you're at your computer, but you have an Ethernet hard line that provides a good connection to your PC. If your desktop or laptop has built-in Wi-Fi, you can use that to create a Wi-Fi hotspot, then connect your phone (or any other wireless device) to the hotspot.


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Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 6E use WPA3, which enables encryption on public Wi-Fi networks. But not all networks you'll encounter use those standards yet. If you want to encrypt all of your wireless traffic on a Wi-Fi network, you can fire up a VPN on your PC (probably a laptop), then connect all of your wireless devices to that laptop's hotspot. Then all of your traffic will be encrypted, and you don't need to worry about whether or not someone is snooping on your online activity.

A Windows hotspot only works when your laptop or desktop has a good internet connection. If it doesn't, you're just creating a miniature local area network (LAN). That can be useful in a few cases, but it probably isn't what you're looking for.

I'm trying to play a video game with my friends that requires a local wifi network that allows UDP broadcasts. The dorm wifi doesn't allow UDP broadcasts, so I'm trying to set up my laptop as a hotspot. Windows 10 by default allows you to share an internet connection over wifi, but you must have an internet connection to do so. Sharing the wifi connection results in a lot of problems such as constant disconnects, and I don't have access to an ethernet connection to share. Is there some way I can set up a wifi network without actually sharing an internet connection?

UPDATE: Thanks for the advice everyone. Issue resolved when using a different laptop running particle than the laptop hosting the hotspot. Also, using the MODE button seemed to put the device into listening mode better than particle usb start-listening (in my case at least).

Ok, that helped. I plugged the Argon into another laptop, and Argon did indeed find the SSID from the hotspot. I selected it, and then it throws an error. Ran particle usb start-listening to get the blinking blue, but same result when particle serial wifi was tried again. I should probably note that particle usb start-listening never terminates - it just flashes the sending command to device message. Ctrl-C to get out.

As you will see, or maybe already know, Ideally you need to connect your PC with ethernet cable to a 1gig router and use it's dedicated 5Ghz wifi as close by as possible. Wifi-only and wifi hotspots do not work well so do not believe everything you see on YouTube. Even the Virtual Desktop developer states that wifi hotspots (esp. ones using a pcie card) are not a good alternative.

A little update in case someone find this thread, my laptop has an intel ax200 that supports both bands, so I connect to the internet with 2.4GHz and make a hotspot with 5GHz to connect with the oculus. The experience it's quite enjoyable. I think I may be able to play even from a hotel room with this setup.

If you were about to spend money anyway, buy a router. Skip all the network card stuff, all the hotspot, a simple router is all you need. mine cost me like 40$USD it is wifi6 nothing fancy, and i am VD user, it has been rock solid for the past 2 years, like rock solid!. I dont want to say the model i am using here but PM is welcomed.

If you're stuck in a situation where you need a Wi-Fi connection, but can't get it anywhere else, chances are your smartphone can give you the boost you need. By setting up a hotspot through Wi-Fi or a USB cable, you can turn your phone into a source for internet that laptops, tablets, and other phones can use to get online.

If you need a mobile hotspot but can't use your phone, you could instead turn your laptop into a Wi-Fi hotspot. If you're a business traveler who needs to be connected all day, consider a dedicated Wi-Fi hotspot.

My PC has a wifi 6 card, and I would like to use it as a hotspot to create a direct connection to the XR Elite for better bandwidth and without other traffic. In Windows 10, I can create a 'mobile hotspot' network and I can connect the XR Elite to this network. However, I can't see my PC from this network, and have no way of connecting to it wirelessly. I also don't see any setting in VIVE Streaming Hub about using such a hotspot network.

I tried this setup (win 11 hotspot with wifi6e card intel ax210)


And it works, but performance is pretty low. The reason is that Windows hotspot with 20Mhz bandwidth on 5Ghz and that's a bit shit honestly. There is currently no way to change the channel width on windows hotspot ?

Here is my project Linux Wifi Hotspot which has both GUI and command-line interface. It can create a virtual wifi hotspot on the same wifi adapter which is connected to the internet. It has additional features such as MAC filter, Change channel/frequency band, view connected devices etc.

on latest ubuntu (04.20) - there is a built in options in the wifi settings.so when you turn on wifi, you have the 3-dots button on top - one of the options there is "turn on hotspot", there, you'll set the wifi SSID and password, and that's it.Note: every wifi adapter can be used only for one action at once - or hotspot of connect to network. so if you have only one adapter and you're connected only via wifi - won't do...

There must be a time that our several devices need to run with Internet connection, but the router is broken suddenly. At this time, we can use the Wi-Fi hotspot provided by Windows to meet an urgent need. Like previous versions, Windows 10 also own this function and there are two ways for us to set up Wi-Fi hotspot in Windows 10 laptop conveniently and quickly.

I kind of cheated and bought a crossed ethernet cable to connect my mini-PC to my laptop when observing away from home. Setting up the mini-PC to boot properly on power-up was a bit of a faff but it works perfectly once done. I control it using Remote Desktop.


This system avoids the need to have a wifi router altogether.


Dave

Hey guys thought I should throw my 2c in as I solved this quite reliably. I use a software called Connectify hotspot (I bought it 10 years ago for traveli tethering my laptop for work). You can set it to automatically start a hotspot on boot:

Been using a GL-iNet GL-AR750s Ext (Slate) USB powered travel router for several years now. Two or three of which operating 24/7 for 3+ months in summer on solar charged off grid battery. It and the J5005 NUC pc idle at 6-8 watts. Set up a second installation with their Beryl USB powered router which is supposed to offer more through-put and distance carry.


First mount does connect to it via Ethernet rather then it's USB or wifi mode, an advantage and one reason to have three Ethernet ports for local only network activity. Having better local only wifi area coverage and duo band broadcasting (if needed) was another.


Tying up my primary phone for hotspot activity and charging maintenance of another system was not a good option for me.

Some business devices, such as laptops, tablets and smartphones, can benefit from having a wireless hotspot nearby. For laptops, it can be beneficial to work without a wired connection. In the case of tablets and smartphones, using Wi-Fi can help minimize the use of a wireless carrier data package. If you don't have a Wi-Fi-capable router, you can create a hotspot using a PC running the Windows operating system.

If you have just one Ethernet cable and no access to other Wi-Fi, using your PC as a hotspot could be a lifesaver. With it, you can add phones, other laptops or anything else that needs Wi-Fi. It's really simple to do in Windows 10. Here's how:

hi ..I dont have wired Ethernet connection but I have USB modem and when i started use this steps the usb connection was down is there another way to make my laptop hotspot and keep my usb modem working

Recently, when in a local fast-food store, I can't connect to a nearby BTwi-fi hotspot using my laptop wifi. I used to be able to, but I don't know what's changed. I can, however, connect using my phone's wifi (which shows strong signal) - then tether my laptop (USB or Bluetooth) - but this is understandably quite tedious!

Any idea why my laptop won't connect? All I get is an 'Unable to connect to this network' message! I'm running Windows 10 on an HP LAPTOP Model 15. As I said earlier, it used to work ok but I've no idea what changed (if anything) on my laptop. What setting could be wrong? Or what info/request could the BT hotspot be expecting that it's not getting?

Randomly - but consistently - right in the middle of loading a website or doing other online work, my laptop will disconnect from the mobile hotspot and the mobile wifi network will disappear from the visible available networks on my laptop. If I turn off the wifi attenae on my laptop then immediately turn it back on, the mobile wifi network is visible again, and I can re-connect and continue working .

2) On the other hand, with this same laptop, I can connect to another person's mobile hotspot (for instance, one from my wife's Pixel 3), and I do NOT have this problem at all. This would imply it is a problem with my particular phone. e24fc04721

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