Download Share Your Internet For Mac
MyPublicWiFi: Turn your computer into a WiFi Access Point with Firewall and URL Tracking MyPublicWiFi is an easy-to-use software that turns your laptop/PC into a Wi-Fi wireless access point. Anyone nearby can surf the Internet through your sharing. This is also an ideal solution for setting up a temporary Access Point in a hotel room,meeting room,at home or the like. The MyPblicWiFi-Firewall can be used to restrict user access to specific servers. You can also prevent the use of certain Internet services (e.g. File sharing programs). MyPublicWiFi allows you to record and track all visited url pages on your virtual WIFI-Hotspot.
This example uses the email address 'admin@dreamhostexample.com': • Enter the following: • Full Name: This is how you'd like your name displayed when sending email. • Click the Sign In button when finished. You should receive notification reading the name or password cannot be identified. • Email Address: This field must contain the full email address. • Password: This is the password you set up for the email when creating it in your panel.

Share Your Mac’s Internet Connection If your Mac connects to the Internet via an Ethernet cable, it can create its own Wi-Fi hotspot to share that connection with another Mac, an iOS device, or any other device with Wi-Fi. In other words, it acts as a software base station.
However, note the following qualifications:. Your Mac can’t re-share an existing Wi-Fi connection. But if you happen to have an Internet connection through another hardware port (a Thunderbolt or FireWire port, for example, or a USB-to-Ethernet adapter), it can share that connection. The range and throughput of your Mac-created Wi-Fi network won’t be as good as what you would get from a stand-alone Wi-Fi router, such as an AirPort Express. Enable Internet Sharing. Go to System Preferences Sharing. Select Internet Sharing in the list on the left ①.

(You can’t select the checkbox itself until you’ve completed a few more steps.) ① Select Internet Sharing to start—but you can’t check the box (yet). On the right, from the Share Your Connection From pop-up menu, choose Ethernet (or whichever other hard-wired connection your Mac uses for Internet access).
In the To Computers Using box, select the Wi-Fi checkbox ②. ② Share an Ethernet connection over Wi-Fi. Click Wi-Fi Options, choose a network name and channel (or just keep the defaults), choose WPA2 Personal from the Security pop-up menu, and enter (and confirm) a password. Select the checkbox next to Internet Sharing on the left. Your Mac’s Internet connection is now shared via Wi-Fi. Note: You can use the same method to share an Internet connection on another interface—for example, you could share a Wi-Fi connection over Thunderbolt—but I cover only Ethernet-to-Wi-Fi here because it’s the most common scenario.
Note: For vastly more detail about Wi-Fi networks of all sorts, including software base stations and ad hoc networks, see Glenn Fleishman’s. Connect from Another Device Once your Mac is sharing its Internet connection over Wi-Fi, the network name you chose in Step 5, previously, should appear in the Wi-Fi menus of all nearby devices. On a Mac, choose the network name from the Wi-Fi menu to connect.
Enter the password when prompted. On an iOS device, tap Settings Wi-Fi, tap the network name, and enter the password when prompted. Ad Hoc Wi-Fi Networks You may be aware of another way to create a Wi-Fi network with your Mac: choose Create Network from the Wi-Fi menu. Doing this sets up what’s called an ad hoc, or computer-to-computer network. It’s a handy way for two or more devices to communicate with each other when there’s not a central Wi-Fi network they can all connect to. But ad hoc networks created this way don’t let a Mac with an Internet connection (via Ethernet, say) share that connection with other devices over Wi-Fi. Also of note: prior to Yosemite, ad hoc networks supported only the older, insecure WEP encryption standard as an option.

Starting with Yosemite, instead of increasing encryption, Apple removed it altogether—ad hoc networks in Yosemite and later are always completely open. Share this tip and chapter on “To keep random strangers from sniffing your traffic, turn on WPA2 encryption when using OS X Internet Sharing.” Discuss “Share Your Mac’s Internet Connection” via Copyright © 2015, alt concepts inc.
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