How to make a WiFi hotspot connection always in the Work or Home firewall profile?
I am using my Android phone as WiFi hotspot. Each day when I start my WiFi hotspot in my mobile, it creates a new connection and then it connects with my laptop's WiFi connection.
Each day I need to change Network location by right clicking on my laptop's WiFi icon and selecting "Open Network and Sharing Centre". I click "Public Network" link below the Network name (Nexus 52
as shown in the image).
To access my laptop's WAMP connection I need to change this "Public Network" to "Home Network" or "Work Network". I do this by clicking on "Public Network" link whichshows me the following dialog:
After doing these steps I can access my WAMP's web services from connected tablet or other phones.
Each day after connecting to my phone's WiFi, it gives its name as Nexus 1
, Nexus 2
and so on (today it is Nexus 52
). Every day a new connection is created and I need to follow all above steps to every day.
But when I come to my office and I connect office's WiFi I do not need to follow above steps of "Home Network" or "Work Network" everyday. I did it once and after that each time when my laptop connects to my office WiFi, it is automatically set as a "Work Network".
How can I do same with my phone's hotspot? I need to fix its name and type as "Home Network".
I am running Windows 7 Home Premium.
networking wireless-networking wireless-router hotspot
|
show 8 more comments
I am using my Android phone as WiFi hotspot. Each day when I start my WiFi hotspot in my mobile, it creates a new connection and then it connects with my laptop's WiFi connection.
Each day I need to change Network location by right clicking on my laptop's WiFi icon and selecting "Open Network and Sharing Centre". I click "Public Network" link below the Network name (Nexus 52
as shown in the image).
To access my laptop's WAMP connection I need to change this "Public Network" to "Home Network" or "Work Network". I do this by clicking on "Public Network" link whichshows me the following dialog:
After doing these steps I can access my WAMP's web services from connected tablet or other phones.
Each day after connecting to my phone's WiFi, it gives its name as Nexus 1
, Nexus 2
and so on (today it is Nexus 52
). Every day a new connection is created and I need to follow all above steps to every day.
But when I come to my office and I connect office's WiFi I do not need to follow above steps of "Home Network" or "Work Network" everyday. I did it once and after that each time when my laptop connects to my office WiFi, it is automatically set as a "Work Network".
How can I do same with my phone's hotspot? I need to fix its name and type as "Home Network".
I am running Windows 7 Home Premium.
networking wireless-networking wireless-router hotspot
Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
1
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53
|
show 8 more comments
I am using my Android phone as WiFi hotspot. Each day when I start my WiFi hotspot in my mobile, it creates a new connection and then it connects with my laptop's WiFi connection.
Each day I need to change Network location by right clicking on my laptop's WiFi icon and selecting "Open Network and Sharing Centre". I click "Public Network" link below the Network name (Nexus 52
as shown in the image).
To access my laptop's WAMP connection I need to change this "Public Network" to "Home Network" or "Work Network". I do this by clicking on "Public Network" link whichshows me the following dialog:
After doing these steps I can access my WAMP's web services from connected tablet or other phones.
Each day after connecting to my phone's WiFi, it gives its name as Nexus 1
, Nexus 2
and so on (today it is Nexus 52
). Every day a new connection is created and I need to follow all above steps to every day.
But when I come to my office and I connect office's WiFi I do not need to follow above steps of "Home Network" or "Work Network" everyday. I did it once and after that each time when my laptop connects to my office WiFi, it is automatically set as a "Work Network".
How can I do same with my phone's hotspot? I need to fix its name and type as "Home Network".
I am running Windows 7 Home Premium.
networking wireless-networking wireless-router hotspot
I am using my Android phone as WiFi hotspot. Each day when I start my WiFi hotspot in my mobile, it creates a new connection and then it connects with my laptop's WiFi connection.
Each day I need to change Network location by right clicking on my laptop's WiFi icon and selecting "Open Network and Sharing Centre". I click "Public Network" link below the Network name (Nexus 52
as shown in the image).
To access my laptop's WAMP connection I need to change this "Public Network" to "Home Network" or "Work Network". I do this by clicking on "Public Network" link whichshows me the following dialog:
After doing these steps I can access my WAMP's web services from connected tablet or other phones.
Each day after connecting to my phone's WiFi, it gives its name as Nexus 1
, Nexus 2
and so on (today it is Nexus 52
). Every day a new connection is created and I need to follow all above steps to every day.
But when I come to my office and I connect office's WiFi I do not need to follow above steps of "Home Network" or "Work Network" everyday. I did it once and after that each time when my laptop connects to my office WiFi, it is automatically set as a "Work Network".
How can I do same with my phone's hotspot? I need to fix its name and type as "Home Network".
I am running Windows 7 Home Premium.
networking wireless-networking wireless-router hotspot
networking wireless-networking wireless-router hotspot
edited Dec 20 '18 at 22:48
Twisty Impersonator
17.8k146495
17.8k146495
asked Dec 12 '18 at 9:13
Lucifer
74451024
74451024
Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
1
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53
|
show 8 more comments
Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
1
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53
Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
1
1
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53
|
show 8 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
The Windows Network Location Awareness (NLA) service uses quite a few characteristics of the network an interface is connected to in order to determine if it's been connected to that network before. The fact Windows is not remembering your choice of firewall profile indicates that there are key differences between each "iteration" of your phone's Wi-Fi hotspot. (Your work's Wi-Fi on the other hand isn't changing between connections in regard to these characteristics which is why you only needed to put it into the "Work" firewall profile the first time.)
There are options through Group Policy to control how NLA categorizes unidentified networks, however you're running the Home edition of Windows which doesn't have Group Policy (and to my knowledge the necessary settings can't be configured directly through the Registry).
Therefore I can offer you two alternative solutions:
Option 1: Don't fight it. Create the firewall rules you need in the Public firewall profile. Because your phone's hotspot will be assigned the public firewall profile by default, the connection to your WAMP services will work without any additional config changes each time you connect to it.
Option 2: Identify which characteristic(s) of your phone's Wi-Fi is making each connection "unique" and prevent it from changing...if you can. Based on the fact your phone uses a new SSID each time you connect I'm doubtful this option will work since I assume you can't control that. But if you want to try, here are the characteristics NLA uses to identify a network according to this Microsoft TechNet blog post:
- Presence of a Domain Controller
- Bandwidth
- Internet Connectivity
- Primary DNS Suffix
- DC Authenticated (i.e. machine is authenticated to a DC via the network interface)
- Host IP address
- Subnet Mask
- Subnet IP address
- Default Gateway IP address
- WINS server
- SSID
- Default Gateway MAC address
- 802.1x Authentication status
Documentation is a bit scant on exactly how and in what combination NLA uses these characteristics to decide a network is unique (e.g. the fact your host gets a different IP address isn't sufficient to make NLA consider the network "new"), so you may have to do some experimenting.
add a comment |
Networks are recognized based on either SSID or (when the SSID is already registered) MAC-adress of your router. Every new network is per default listed as "public" to avoid data leaks. So either your phone is reporting a new MAC every time or counts the number of hotspots in its SSID.
add a comment |
The problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company,
but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers.
In addition, trying Android apps that provide WiFi hotspots has not made a
difference.
In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public.
In the office, the network is naturally defined as "Work".
I have found many references to this problem on Internet, but there is no
explanation why this difference causes Android to behave in a different manner.
It seems that some different information from the ISP on each tethering
causes Android to create a new virtual network adapter with a different
MAC address and a new SSID.
You should call the ISP's Support, but there might be some difficulty in reaching
a person technical enough to understand the problem.
My own phone company markets a small portable WiFi connector, which is
in effect a permanent WiFi hotspot that replaces your phone.
If your ISP does too, such a gadget might work better in your case,
although it might come with a fee (but they might be open to negotiation
if you complain loudly enough).
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The Windows Network Location Awareness (NLA) service uses quite a few characteristics of the network an interface is connected to in order to determine if it's been connected to that network before. The fact Windows is not remembering your choice of firewall profile indicates that there are key differences between each "iteration" of your phone's Wi-Fi hotspot. (Your work's Wi-Fi on the other hand isn't changing between connections in regard to these characteristics which is why you only needed to put it into the "Work" firewall profile the first time.)
There are options through Group Policy to control how NLA categorizes unidentified networks, however you're running the Home edition of Windows which doesn't have Group Policy (and to my knowledge the necessary settings can't be configured directly through the Registry).
Therefore I can offer you two alternative solutions:
Option 1: Don't fight it. Create the firewall rules you need in the Public firewall profile. Because your phone's hotspot will be assigned the public firewall profile by default, the connection to your WAMP services will work without any additional config changes each time you connect to it.
Option 2: Identify which characteristic(s) of your phone's Wi-Fi is making each connection "unique" and prevent it from changing...if you can. Based on the fact your phone uses a new SSID each time you connect I'm doubtful this option will work since I assume you can't control that. But if you want to try, here are the characteristics NLA uses to identify a network according to this Microsoft TechNet blog post:
- Presence of a Domain Controller
- Bandwidth
- Internet Connectivity
- Primary DNS Suffix
- DC Authenticated (i.e. machine is authenticated to a DC via the network interface)
- Host IP address
- Subnet Mask
- Subnet IP address
- Default Gateway IP address
- WINS server
- SSID
- Default Gateway MAC address
- 802.1x Authentication status
Documentation is a bit scant on exactly how and in what combination NLA uses these characteristics to decide a network is unique (e.g. the fact your host gets a different IP address isn't sufficient to make NLA consider the network "new"), so you may have to do some experimenting.
add a comment |
The Windows Network Location Awareness (NLA) service uses quite a few characteristics of the network an interface is connected to in order to determine if it's been connected to that network before. The fact Windows is not remembering your choice of firewall profile indicates that there are key differences between each "iteration" of your phone's Wi-Fi hotspot. (Your work's Wi-Fi on the other hand isn't changing between connections in regard to these characteristics which is why you only needed to put it into the "Work" firewall profile the first time.)
There are options through Group Policy to control how NLA categorizes unidentified networks, however you're running the Home edition of Windows which doesn't have Group Policy (and to my knowledge the necessary settings can't be configured directly through the Registry).
Therefore I can offer you two alternative solutions:
Option 1: Don't fight it. Create the firewall rules you need in the Public firewall profile. Because your phone's hotspot will be assigned the public firewall profile by default, the connection to your WAMP services will work without any additional config changes each time you connect to it.
Option 2: Identify which characteristic(s) of your phone's Wi-Fi is making each connection "unique" and prevent it from changing...if you can. Based on the fact your phone uses a new SSID each time you connect I'm doubtful this option will work since I assume you can't control that. But if you want to try, here are the characteristics NLA uses to identify a network according to this Microsoft TechNet blog post:
- Presence of a Domain Controller
- Bandwidth
- Internet Connectivity
- Primary DNS Suffix
- DC Authenticated (i.e. machine is authenticated to a DC via the network interface)
- Host IP address
- Subnet Mask
- Subnet IP address
- Default Gateway IP address
- WINS server
- SSID
- Default Gateway MAC address
- 802.1x Authentication status
Documentation is a bit scant on exactly how and in what combination NLA uses these characteristics to decide a network is unique (e.g. the fact your host gets a different IP address isn't sufficient to make NLA consider the network "new"), so you may have to do some experimenting.
add a comment |
The Windows Network Location Awareness (NLA) service uses quite a few characteristics of the network an interface is connected to in order to determine if it's been connected to that network before. The fact Windows is not remembering your choice of firewall profile indicates that there are key differences between each "iteration" of your phone's Wi-Fi hotspot. (Your work's Wi-Fi on the other hand isn't changing between connections in regard to these characteristics which is why you only needed to put it into the "Work" firewall profile the first time.)
There are options through Group Policy to control how NLA categorizes unidentified networks, however you're running the Home edition of Windows which doesn't have Group Policy (and to my knowledge the necessary settings can't be configured directly through the Registry).
Therefore I can offer you two alternative solutions:
Option 1: Don't fight it. Create the firewall rules you need in the Public firewall profile. Because your phone's hotspot will be assigned the public firewall profile by default, the connection to your WAMP services will work without any additional config changes each time you connect to it.
Option 2: Identify which characteristic(s) of your phone's Wi-Fi is making each connection "unique" and prevent it from changing...if you can. Based on the fact your phone uses a new SSID each time you connect I'm doubtful this option will work since I assume you can't control that. But if you want to try, here are the characteristics NLA uses to identify a network according to this Microsoft TechNet blog post:
- Presence of a Domain Controller
- Bandwidth
- Internet Connectivity
- Primary DNS Suffix
- DC Authenticated (i.e. machine is authenticated to a DC via the network interface)
- Host IP address
- Subnet Mask
- Subnet IP address
- Default Gateway IP address
- WINS server
- SSID
- Default Gateway MAC address
- 802.1x Authentication status
Documentation is a bit scant on exactly how and in what combination NLA uses these characteristics to decide a network is unique (e.g. the fact your host gets a different IP address isn't sufficient to make NLA consider the network "new"), so you may have to do some experimenting.
The Windows Network Location Awareness (NLA) service uses quite a few characteristics of the network an interface is connected to in order to determine if it's been connected to that network before. The fact Windows is not remembering your choice of firewall profile indicates that there are key differences between each "iteration" of your phone's Wi-Fi hotspot. (Your work's Wi-Fi on the other hand isn't changing between connections in regard to these characteristics which is why you only needed to put it into the "Work" firewall profile the first time.)
There are options through Group Policy to control how NLA categorizes unidentified networks, however you're running the Home edition of Windows which doesn't have Group Policy (and to my knowledge the necessary settings can't be configured directly through the Registry).
Therefore I can offer you two alternative solutions:
Option 1: Don't fight it. Create the firewall rules you need in the Public firewall profile. Because your phone's hotspot will be assigned the public firewall profile by default, the connection to your WAMP services will work without any additional config changes each time you connect to it.
Option 2: Identify which characteristic(s) of your phone's Wi-Fi is making each connection "unique" and prevent it from changing...if you can. Based on the fact your phone uses a new SSID each time you connect I'm doubtful this option will work since I assume you can't control that. But if you want to try, here are the characteristics NLA uses to identify a network according to this Microsoft TechNet blog post:
- Presence of a Domain Controller
- Bandwidth
- Internet Connectivity
- Primary DNS Suffix
- DC Authenticated (i.e. machine is authenticated to a DC via the network interface)
- Host IP address
- Subnet Mask
- Subnet IP address
- Default Gateway IP address
- WINS server
- SSID
- Default Gateway MAC address
- 802.1x Authentication status
Documentation is a bit scant on exactly how and in what combination NLA uses these characteristics to decide a network is unique (e.g. the fact your host gets a different IP address isn't sufficient to make NLA consider the network "new"), so you may have to do some experimenting.
edited Dec 20 '18 at 22:50
answered Dec 20 '18 at 22:42
Twisty Impersonator
17.8k146495
17.8k146495
add a comment |
add a comment |
Networks are recognized based on either SSID or (when the SSID is already registered) MAC-adress of your router. Every new network is per default listed as "public" to avoid data leaks. So either your phone is reporting a new MAC every time or counts the number of hotspots in its SSID.
add a comment |
Networks are recognized based on either SSID or (when the SSID is already registered) MAC-adress of your router. Every new network is per default listed as "public" to avoid data leaks. So either your phone is reporting a new MAC every time or counts the number of hotspots in its SSID.
add a comment |
Networks are recognized based on either SSID or (when the SSID is already registered) MAC-adress of your router. Every new network is per default listed as "public" to avoid data leaks. So either your phone is reporting a new MAC every time or counts the number of hotspots in its SSID.
Networks are recognized based on either SSID or (when the SSID is already registered) MAC-adress of your router. Every new network is per default listed as "public" to avoid data leaks. So either your phone is reporting a new MAC every time or counts the number of hotspots in its SSID.
answered Dec 17 '18 at 12:12
Werdck
161
161
add a comment |
add a comment |
The problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company,
but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers.
In addition, trying Android apps that provide WiFi hotspots has not made a
difference.
In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public.
In the office, the network is naturally defined as "Work".
I have found many references to this problem on Internet, but there is no
explanation why this difference causes Android to behave in a different manner.
It seems that some different information from the ISP on each tethering
causes Android to create a new virtual network adapter with a different
MAC address and a new SSID.
You should call the ISP's Support, but there might be some difficulty in reaching
a person technical enough to understand the problem.
My own phone company markets a small portable WiFi connector, which is
in effect a permanent WiFi hotspot that replaces your phone.
If your ISP does too, such a gadget might work better in your case,
although it might come with a fee (but they might be open to negotiation
if you complain loudly enough).
add a comment |
The problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company,
but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers.
In addition, trying Android apps that provide WiFi hotspots has not made a
difference.
In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public.
In the office, the network is naturally defined as "Work".
I have found many references to this problem on Internet, but there is no
explanation why this difference causes Android to behave in a different manner.
It seems that some different information from the ISP on each tethering
causes Android to create a new virtual network adapter with a different
MAC address and a new SSID.
You should call the ISP's Support, but there might be some difficulty in reaching
a person technical enough to understand the problem.
My own phone company markets a small portable WiFi connector, which is
in effect a permanent WiFi hotspot that replaces your phone.
If your ISP does too, such a gadget might work better in your case,
although it might come with a fee (but they might be open to negotiation
if you complain loudly enough).
add a comment |
The problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company,
but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers.
In addition, trying Android apps that provide WiFi hotspots has not made a
difference.
In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public.
In the office, the network is naturally defined as "Work".
I have found many references to this problem on Internet, but there is no
explanation why this difference causes Android to behave in a different manner.
It seems that some different information from the ISP on each tethering
causes Android to create a new virtual network adapter with a different
MAC address and a new SSID.
You should call the ISP's Support, but there might be some difficulty in reaching
a person technical enough to understand the problem.
My own phone company markets a small portable WiFi connector, which is
in effect a permanent WiFi hotspot that replaces your phone.
If your ISP does too, such a gadget might work better in your case,
although it might come with a fee (but they might be open to negotiation
if you complain loudly enough).
The problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company,
but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers.
In addition, trying Android apps that provide WiFi hotspots has not made a
difference.
In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public.
In the office, the network is naturally defined as "Work".
I have found many references to this problem on Internet, but there is no
explanation why this difference causes Android to behave in a different manner.
It seems that some different information from the ISP on each tethering
causes Android to create a new virtual network adapter with a different
MAC address and a new SSID.
You should call the ISP's Support, but there might be some difficulty in reaching
a person technical enough to understand the problem.
My own phone company markets a small portable WiFi connector, which is
in effect a permanent WiFi hotspot that replaces your phone.
If your ISP does too, such a gadget might work better in your case,
although it might come with a fee (but they might be open to negotiation
if you complain loudly enough).
answered Dec 17 '18 at 16:29
harrymc
254k13265565
254k13265565
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Do I understand correctly that the problem arrives at home only, where Internet is supplied by the phone company, but does not arrive at the office where the Internet is supplied by company routers? In this case, it is your phone company that has set your residence as Public, and you should call their Support.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 9:59
@harrymc, Yes you understood it correctly
– Lucifer
Dec 14 '18 at 10:18
More possibilities: (1) Try the registry edit in the last entry of this thread. (2) Check if the phone presents the same MAC address on every tethering, and if not maybe use some app for it. For example the trialware ClockworkMod Tether (no root) that installs a virtual network adapter on the computer.
– harrymc
Dec 14 '18 at 11:40
Network Location Awareness (NLA) is buggy trash code on Win7. I sometimes disable that service because there is no fixing it.
– HackSlash
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
1
@EricW. , actually there 1312 Connections.....+ 52 (again starting from 0)
– Lucifer
Dec 17 '18 at 8:53