You know you can surf the Net on your Android phone--but did you know
that the same phone can also enable you to surf the Net from your PC?

We're talking about something called tethering. In a nutshell,
tethering allows you to use your smartphone like a wireless modem: You
connect it to your computer, then use its 3G connection to get online.

Carrier Considerations

Before you start thinking about tethering with your Android device,
you should check with your carrier to learn about its policies and
conditions. Some carriers offer their own fee-based tethering services
for certain phones; others forbid the practice altogether or assess
penalties if they discover you're doing it.

As long as your carrier doesn't object, the only other consideration
is data usage. While tethering, you'll be harnessing your phone's 3G
connection to use the Internet from a computer, so you will be
consuming a potentially sizable chunk of data. If your smartphone plan
includes unlimited data, you should be fine; but if your plan allows
only a certain amount of data per month, be sure to keep that
restriction in mind.

First Steps to Tethering

Carrier-provided options aside, there are numerous ways to tether your
phone to your laptop or desktop PC. Many of them require tinkering
with advanced configurations on your Android device; we won't be
getting into those here. The option we'll be explaining involves
little more than installing a couple of programs and clicking on a
couple of basic settings.

Let's begin with your mobile phone: Open up the Android Market and
search for an app called PdaNet. Download and install it to your phone
(it's currently available free of charge).

Once the app is installed, you'll need to download the companion
program to your PC. Click over to June Fabrics (that's the name), and
select the edition that's right for you. As of this writing, the
program supports 32-bit versions of Windows XP, Windows Vista, and
Windows 7; 64-bit versions of Windows Vista and Windows 7; and
versions 10.5 and 10.6 of Mac OS.

Before you move on to the next step, you need to adjust one setting on
your Android phone. From the home screen, tap the Menu key and select
Settings. From there, select Applications, and then Development. Now
check the box that says USB debugging. When the confirmation dialog
box appears, press OK.

This setting allows the PdaNet app to stream data directly from your
phone to your PC. It is a setting frequently used by developers. In
theory, however, as the confirmation box explains, it could be used
maliciously. For your protection, you should go back into this menu
and disable the USB debugging setting whenever you are not actively
using the tethering function.

Starting Your Connection

Take a deep breath--you're almost done. Plug your Android phone into
an open USB port on your PC. Run the PdaNet app on your phone and
select the Enable USB Tether option. The app will confirm that you've
downloaded and installed its PC-based cousin; click Already installed
to continue.

After verifying the connection, the app will tell you that it's on and
running as a background service on your phone. Now, go to your PC and
look for the PdaNet icon in your system tray--it's a rectangular box
that looks like a cell phone. Right-click the icon and select Connect
from the pop-up menu that appears.

At this point, everything should be all set (woo-hoo!). The PdaNet PC
program should pop up a confirmation that you're connected, and a
notification should appear on your desktop informing you that the
PdaNet modem is up and running. Your computer is now online through
your phone's data connection; you can open a Web page, check e-mail,
and do practically anything else you could normally do while connected
to the Net.

One final note: You may have noticed that the PdaNet Android app has a
second option on its main screen: Enable Bluetooth DUN. If you're
using a computer that has Bluetooth functionality, you can connect
your phone to your PC wirelessly using this option instead of the
Enable USB Tether option discussed above.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/06/AR2010050605611.html

-- 
Salam,


Agus Hamonangan

http://groups.google.com/group/id-android
Gtalk :  agus.hamonangan
Tweet :@agushamonangan
Japri  :  [email protected]

-- 
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