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Turn Your Smartphone Into a Wi-Fi Access Point with WMWifiRouter

January 9th, 2008 @ 9:00 am

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Categories: Gizmos and Gadgets, Software, Travel Tips

Tags: Wi-Fi Access Point, Smart Phone, Wi-Fi, Smartphone, Access Point, It, Rick Broida

wm-smartphone.jpgExciting news for owners of Windows Mobile smartphones: WMWifiRouter lets you turn your handset into a Wi-Fi access point, able to share its high-speed Internet connection with one or more nearby notebooks.

Traditionally, leveraging your phone’s modem capabilities involved a process known as tethering, which links phone and notebook via cable or Bluetooth. It’s a bit of a hassle to set up, and it often requires buying a connectivity kit. Plus, Bluetooth tethering throttles the connection, so you don’t always get full 3G performance. WMWifiRouter, a free utility, accomplishes the same thing as tethering, but with the speed and simplicity of Wi-Fi.

Once installed, the program effectively turns your smartphone into a wireless access point — much like the pricey CradlePoint CTR-350 Cellular Travel Router and WAAV Airbox CM3 we wrote about a while back. Fire up your notebook, wait for it to detect the new “network,” and you’re off to the races.

A few caveats: WMWifiRouter is still in development, and there’s not so much as a user guide available for it yet. If you’re a novice user, you may want to steer clear for now. As for the hardware, you’ll need a Windows Mobile 5/6 smartphone that has Wi-Fi (most models do) — and even then you may encounter problems. Check other users’ experiences in this online forum.

I’m between WM smartphones at the moment, so I can’t put this to the test myself. If you’re able to, please share your experiences in the Comments! [via Lifehacker]

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  • Blogger Thumbnail Rick Broida A technology writer for more than 15 years, Rick Broida is a regular contributor to CNET, Popular Science, Wired and other publications. He's also the author of numerous books, including How to Do Everything with Your Zune. When he's not chained to his keyboard, he's usually shooting hoops or watching quality television. more »

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