Posted August 18, 2018
When using the USB cable method, the phone is charging all the time through the USB port, so the battery will not be exhausted, ever, never ever, neverneverever.
If you set up the phone as a wifi hotspot instead, then yes it will eat battery power quite fast... unless you simply connect the phone to a charger while it is acting as a wifi hotspot. Problem solved.
Gekko_Dekko: If your problem is about access to network while traveling - there are bunch of usb devices for such purpouse (put sim card inside, plug device into your laptop and here you go), which usually work way better I used to have such "USB SIM stick", and I didn't see any benefit with it, It didn't "work better", as in giving better speeds or anything, than using the same SIM on a phone.
The main drawback with it is (was) that in practice it needed its own SIM, unless you keep swapping the SIM between the phone and that USB SIM stick all the time, which will be a real pain in the butt. Then if the SIM is in the USB stick, you can't receive or make calls with your phone, as you could if the SIM was in it (yes, making and receiving calls even while that phone is providing internet connection to your laptop, works fine, I've done that all the time,, even played Team Fortress 2 while talking to my wife on that same phone).
I still don't quite understand why so many people try their best to make it look like a bad idea to use your phone (and its SIM) to provide internet for your PC/laptop. The issues raised in these discussions are either no issues at all, or rather insignificant (like the point that using and charging your phone a lot wears its battery... well, that's the nature of the beast, and as said I haven't seen my wife's phones lasting any longer than my phones, where the latter ones are often used for PC internet connectivity).
Just do it. It works, it is great, it is beautiful. Don't believe the naysayers.
Themken: I have used a couple of different mobiles as routers and it worked just fine, even trying out all the different methods I found. Best for me was just using the USB cord that usually is attached to my charger. I also usually use the USB method, just because then the phone charges all the time and it just feels simpler and more foolproof.
But the wifi hotspot method works fine too, as far as I can tell even the speeds and ping times are just as good as with using an USB cable. I'd use the wifi hotspot method mainly if there are several devices which would want to use the phone for internet connectivity, at the same time.
If you set up the phone as a wifi hotspot instead, then yes it will eat battery power quite fast... unless you simply connect the phone to a charger while it is acting as a wifi hotspot. Problem solved.
![avatar](http://images.gog.com/224eb99b3ba5d36a3b7c4841755afe09060ee37c247b7848fa439892f08bd362_avm.jpg)
The main drawback with it is (was) that in practice it needed its own SIM, unless you keep swapping the SIM between the phone and that USB SIM stick all the time, which will be a real pain in the butt. Then if the SIM is in the USB stick, you can't receive or make calls with your phone, as you could if the SIM was in it (yes, making and receiving calls even while that phone is providing internet connection to your laptop, works fine, I've done that all the time,, even played Team Fortress 2 while talking to my wife on that same phone).
I still don't quite understand why so many people try their best to make it look like a bad idea to use your phone (and its SIM) to provide internet for your PC/laptop. The issues raised in these discussions are either no issues at all, or rather insignificant (like the point that using and charging your phone a lot wears its battery... well, that's the nature of the beast, and as said I haven't seen my wife's phones lasting any longer than my phones, where the latter ones are often used for PC internet connectivity).
Just do it. It works, it is great, it is beautiful. Don't believe the naysayers.
![avatar](http://images.gog.com/1a71e0ce73ef8b385958b482690328f2580a6780e2dd7899f936d64c6687396b_avm.jpg)
But the wifi hotspot method works fine too, as far as I can tell even the speeds and ping times are just as good as with using an USB cable. I'd use the wifi hotspot method mainly if there are several devices which would want to use the phone for internet connectivity, at the same time.
Post edited August 18, 2018 by timppu