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2012 Nexus 7 Discussion Forums (1st Generation) => Nexus 7 Connect (MicroUSB, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, Pogo Pin) => Topic started by: Bhanu on August 05, 2012, 10:15:47 PM
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Could some one tell me if the Nexus 7 can pair with Samsung Galaxy II that has ICS? my Nexus 7 can pair with an iOS but not with an Android phone.
Also, if it can pair with the phone can I use tethering and use my S11 as a mobile hotspot?
Thanks
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Could some one tell me if the Nexus 7 can pair with Samsung Galaxy II that has ICS? my Nexus 7 can pair with an iOS but not with an Android phone.
Also, if it can pair with the phone can I use tethering and use my S11 as a mobile hotspot?
Thanks
Pairs great with my Gnex. Wifi tether works well on the rooted ICS Gnex, but not on the Gnex with JB.
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I have an unlocked gnex and I use portable wifi hot spot. Remember these features cost extra and you have to be signed up for them to work unless your unlocked.
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On a g2 open up settings, then under wireless and network hit more..., then hit tethering, and then check Bluetooth tethering. If you've already paired your devices you are good to go, if not just pair the devices like any other Bluetooth and they should connect and off you go..... this post was made on my n7 Bluetooth tethered from my epic 4g touch (aka galaxy s2) running ICS
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I have an unlocked gnex and I use portable wifi hot spot. Remember these features cost extra and you have to be signed up for them to work unless your unlocked.
Well, that's not 100% correct. Some carriers don't charge extra to be a hotspot nor does your phone necessarily have to be unlocked.
radio
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UK N7 user here so my experience may differ from you US and Canadian users.
I have rooted and am running an ICS AOKP custom ROM on my S2 (GT-I9100), I can't get an internet connect in to work via Bluetooth. They're paired but that's where it ends, no internet signal being passed from the S2 to my N7 but I can connect via Portable Wi-Fi hotspot and that how I'm connected writing this reply.
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I have an unlocked gnex and I use portable wifi hot spot. Remember these features cost extra and you have to be signed up for them to work unless your unlocked.
Well, that's not 100% correct. Some carriers don't charge extra to be a hotspot nor does your phone necessarily have to be unlocked.
radio
Well my apologies. Any carrier in the US will charge around 30 bucks a month for tethering. If you don't want to pay this fee for the data you already own you can buy an unlocked phone or you can root your phone and activate this feature (which requires you to unlock it as well). If you tether to a computer your phone company will catch on because your computer requests desktop sites and your phone or tablet does not. While you can still request desktop sites your device still has a mobile signature so the phone company cannot tell the difference.
Does that clear things up?
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You guys really do have it hard, that is such a con being charged twice for data just for tethering!!!
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You guys really do have it hard, that is such a con being charged twice for data just for tethering!!!
Its terrible. I don't know any phone provider that doesn't charge in the states. I've always heard that the networks are better in Europe and its more competitive, and everyone uses gsm in Europe as well.
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Yeah I think your right, obviously I have no experience of US providers/carriers, it's just what I've read on other android forums.
We use 3G here for data, 4G (LTE) is being tested at the moment so you do have some advantages but your right it is much more competitive here which is obviously beneficial to us the consumers.
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You can check out Ting, I believe they don't charge extra.
r
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Just to throw something into the mix, I know people who are using tethering apps on Verizon without root. It has been noted in a separate post that by agreement concerning the C spectrum they cannot block tethering. Read the full article m.blogs.computerworld.com/mobilewireless/20776/verizon-tethering (http://m.blogs.computerworld.com/mobilewireless/20776/verizon-tethering)
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Just to throw something into the mix, I know people who are using tethering apps on Verizon without root. It has been noted in a separate post that by agreement concerning the C spectrum they cannot block tethering. Read the full article m.blogs.computerworld.com/mobilewireless/20776/verizon-tethering ([url]http://m.blogs.computerworld.com/mobilewireless/20776/verizon-tethering[/url])
The article confuses me. Is it saying you can now tether for free on Verizon now? Or is it just pointing out the fact that Verizon screws its customers like always?
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These word games are quite common with Big Red. I've been with them for more than ten years, and they have never ceased to amaze me with just how sneaky they get with some of their tactics. The unfortunate part is their service is that superior to all competitors, so we stay. That, and their devices are typically better, although throttled. That's easily fixed when rooted.