Cheap Hosting Domain Names

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 6 April 2012

What is Tethering and Hotspot?

Posted on 10:01 by Unknown
Tethering means sharing the Internet connection of an Internet-capable mobile phone or internet tablet with other devices like laptop.

This sharing can be offered over:

  • A wireless LAN (Wi-Fi),
  • Bluetooth, or
  • USB
In the case of tethering over wireless LAN, the feature may be branded as a mobile hotspot. The Internet-connected mobile phone acts as a portable router when providing tethering services to others.

Why Tathering?

  • When traveling, in places where local Wi-Fi hotspots are unavailable or inconvenient
  • In rural areas or other residential locations where no high-speed Internet access options exist.
  • As an emergency fall back option in the home, when the primary form of high-speed Internet access is unavailable due to service outage.
  • You can also surf the web more securely using a tethered cell phone, because your information is being sent directly through the phone, for example, over a public open wireless hotspot.
  • You may also conserve some laptop battery power, because you can turn off wi-fi on your laptop while you use your tethered cellular modem.
Why not Tathering?
  • A mobile broadband data plan with tethering option is required; these may be more expensive than standard home broadband and may also limit the amount of network traffic.
  • Connections often run at very low speeds (data rates significantly less than 1 Mbps)
  • Phone and cellular network providers may forbid using some devices for tethering, or void their warranty.
  • Using your cell phone's data service for your laptop will, however, drain the phone's battery more quickly, especially if you're using bluetooth to connect. If you have a USB port on your laptop that can also charge devices, tethering via USB would be a better way to connect.
  • You also may not be able to use your voice service on the cell phone while it is tethered, depending on your particular phone and connection method.
Hotspot

A hotspot is any location where Wi-Fi network access (usually Internet access) is made publicly available.

Technically speaking, hotspots consist of one or several wireless access points installed inside buildngs and/or adjoining outdoor areas.

A hotspot is a site that offers Internet access over a wireless local area network through the use of a router connected to a link to an Internet service provider. Hotspots typically use Wi-Fi technology.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Others | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Online Economics Degrees
    Economists research and analyze economics, or the way people choose to use their resources to produce goods and services. Economists typical...
  • Online DBA (Database Administrator) Degrees
    Database managers keep vital information organized.  With a database technology degree, you may find yourself organizing customer informatio...
  • Online Advertising Degrees
    The objective of any business firm is to market and sell its products or services profitably. In small firms, the owner or chief executive o...
  • Online Photography Degrees
    For those crave autonomy, flexibility, and, above all, creativity, a career in photography may seem ideal. If you have an artistic eye, tech...
  • Online BCA Degrees
    The boom in the IT industry has opened up plenty of job opportunities for computer professionals. As a result, computer application courses ...
  • Online Professional Degrees
    Going back to get more education can be a difficult, time consuming and sometimes impossible proposition. But with new advances in virtual t...
  • Online Pharmacy Degrees
    Filling prescriptions is only one job that pharmacists perform each day. Taking inventory, making sure people are taking the right medicatio...
  • Online MA Degrees
    A Master of Arts (MA) is a postgraduate academic degree that is typically awarded in Humanities, Fine Art, Theology or Social Sciences. The ...
  • Online Social Science Degrees
    Social science covers a broad range of fields: behavioral science, history, economics, geography, political science, women''s studie...
  • Online Human Resource (HR) Degrees
    In today's economy, the quality of a company''s personnel can mean the difference between a slot on the Fortune 500 and a trip t...

Categories

  • AJAX
  • C++
  • CSS
  • Delphi
  • DOTNET
  • HTML
  • Javascript
  • jQuery
  • Management
  • Online Degrees
  • Oracle
  • Others
  • Phonegap
  • PHP
  • Unix
  • XML

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2012 (180)
    • ►  September (89)
    • ►  August (11)
    • ►  July (4)
    • ►  June (3)
    • ►  May (25)
    • ▼  April (48)
      • DOM Events: Mouse Events, Keyboard Events, Form Ev...
      • What is DOM (Document Object Model): Tree and Node...
      • DocType: Strict, Transitional and Frameset
      • How the ASP.NET authentication process works?
      • Response.Redirect vs Server.Transfer: What to use ...
      • GET vs POST: Which one is better? A 10 point compa...
      • HTTP vs HTTPS: Similarities and Differences
      • How IIS processes ASP.NET request?
      • AutoEventWireup in ASP.NET: Why my ASP.NET events ...
      • Web Farms in ASP.NET: Advantages and Issues
      • Cautions while dropping a tablespace
      • 12 Point Comparision between FTP and HTTP Protocol...
      • Dataset, Dataview, Datatable and common operations...
      • Client Side State Management in ASP.NET
      • Difference between page_init, page_load and page_p...
      • Database FLASHBACK mode: Overview
      • Database ARCHIVELOG mode: Overview
      • Hash Collision Attacks in .NET
      • ADO.NET: A quick revision
      • What is SQL Injection?
      • What is ASP.NET AJAX?
      • What is DLL HELL?
      • DIV vs TABLE tag: Which one to use?
      • Exception Handling in ASP.NET
      • Business Intelligence (BI): Data Warehouse, Data M...
      • UDDI: Universal Description, Discovery and Integra...
      • Web Services: Exposing and Consuming
      • Web Service Description Language
      • Simple Object Access Protocol
      • Caching in ASP.NET
      • Partial Classes in ASP.NET
      • Difference between DLL and EXE Files
      • What is an ASP.NET User Control?
      • Page Directive in ASP.NET
      • DOTNET Framework: CLR, CTS and CLS
      • What is Tethering and Hotspot?
      • Preventing Caching in AJAX URLs
      • What is web.config file? What is the significance ...
      • HTML vs XHTML vs DHTML
      • AJAX - A quick revision
      • Web Server vs Application Server vs Database Server
      • Difference Between ASP.NET Server Controls and HTM...
      • web.config vs app.config vs machine.config
      • Assemblies in .NET Framework
      • Silver Bullets for Testing
      • Unix Commands which should be on tips of each deve...
      • Basics of IBM Websphere MQ (Part 1)
      • What is Garbage Collector? How and when does it run?
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile