The idea is a
simple one Windows
7 feature called Virtual Wi-Fi. the operating system can virtualise any
compatible wireless adapter, to make it appear as though you've as many
additional adapters as you need.
The effect is
dramatic. Once it's set up, then any Wi-Fi compatible device that can connect
to you - another desktop, laptop, or an iPod Touch, say - will immediately be
able to get online, by sharing your internet connection through a duplicate of
your wireless adapter.
Getting this
working isn't too difficult, either, as long as you can get over the first
hurdle: finding a virtual Wi-Fi-compatible driver for your wireless adapter.
Intel's latest 32-bit and 64-bit
drivers now include support, as do various others for Atheros, Broadcom,
Realtek and other big players, but these don't apply to every chipset. Check
the support site for your wireless adapter to see what's available.
If you're in
luck and manage to find and install an up-to-date Windows 7 driver for your
adapter, then the next step is to set it up, and for that you'll need an
elevated command prompt. Click Start, type CMD, right-click the Cmd.exe link
and select "Run as Administrator".
Now type the
following command:
netsh wlan set
hostednetwork mode=allow ssid=MyNet key=MyPassword
and press
[Enter]. Replace "MyNet" with the name you'd like to use for your
custom network, and "MyPassword" with a password that's a little
harder to guess.
Still at the
command line, type
netsh wlan
start hostednetwork
and press
[Enter] to fire up the virtual adapter.
Now click
Control Panel >>> Network and Internet >>> Network
and Sharing Centre >>> Change Adapter Settings, right-click your
internet connection and select Properties. Click the Sharing tab, check
"Allow other network users to connect...", choose your virtual Wi-Fi
adaptor - and that's it.
Any nearby
Wi-Fi enabled device should see a new network appear with the SSID you defined
above. They'll be able to connect to it using your password, and can then
immediately share your internet connection.
While it's
worth knowing how to do this manually, if it's something you do often then
you'll probably prefer a simpler solution.
You could speed
things up a little by creating a batch file to run the netsh commands, perhaps,
but for a really easy life we'd recommend you install Virtual Router. It's compact, free, and will
automate the whole process for you with the minimum of hassle.
source:Virtual Wi-Fi
source:Virtual Wi-Fi

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