How-To: Turn Your Windows 7 PC into a Wireless Access Point
If you've ever been in a situation when you absolutely, positively, need to share a network connection wirelessly, and you have a PC with a wireless adapter that runs Windows 7, Connectify (from wireless mesh networking company Nomadio, Inc.) is the answer. Connectify (currently in beta) turns almost any Windows 7 PC with a working wireless network adapter into a fast and secure wireless access point.

What You Need
- A PC running Windows 7*
- A working wireless adapter**
- Software from the Connectify Me website
- About 15 minutes of your time
*Connectify works with Windows 7 final and Windows 7 RC
**Update - some Intel network adapters might not work with Connectify - see Paul Lilly's comment below
Getting Started
- Navigate to the Connectify Me website and click either the Download Beta button or Beta Test Now shield.
- Enter registration information and click Submit.
- Click the Click Here to Download Connectify link to download it immediately (instead of waiting for the promised email link which you might, or might not, receive on a timely basis).
- Run the 1.41MB installer, and provide UAC information if prompted.
- After you sign off on the license agreement, the installer does its work.
- Click Next to continue, and click Finish. By default, Connectify will start, and a readme will open in your browser.
Setting Up Connectify
If you don't see the Connectify icon in the notification area, click the up arrow pointer to display additional icons. Click the Connectify icon.

The first time you start Connectify, you will see an error message. That's because Connectify needs you to provide a passphrase. Click the passphrase field and enter the text you want to use. You must enter at least eight characters (up to 32) for your passphrase text (you can display or hide the text as desired). Connectify uses WPA2 AES encryption for maximum security.
By default, Connectify uses Connectify as its SSID. To change the SSID, enter the name you prefer in the WiFi Name field.
If you have more than one connection you can share, select the connection to share from the Internet pull-down menu. You can use Connectify to share a wired connection (which is what I used for this article), or a wireless connection. You need only one wireless adapter to make sharing work, even if you're sharing a wireless connection wirelessly.
Click the Hotspot Off button to turn on the Connectify access point.

Connecting to a Connectify Access Point
Whether you use Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, MacOS, or Linux, connecting to the Connectify software access point uses the same procedures you use to connect to any secure wireless access point that broadcasts its SSID:
- Select the SSID used by the network
- Enter the passphrase when prompted
- Make the connection
- Make any firewall or other configuration changes requested by your wireless network client
Once other PCs have connected to the Connectify software access point, Connectify lists the computer(s) connected to it by their network names and IP addresses.

When you shut down the connection, Connectify "remembers" who was connected to the network, listing them as "disconnected clients."
Conclusion
Connectify works - and works well - because it relies upon new networking features built into Windows 7. Right now, Connectify costs nothing to try – and it provides a solid, secure, and fast connection. Whether you're looking for a quick way to share a wired connection in a hotel room or conference center, add wireless capability with Internet access to a home or office wired network, or set up a quick, easy LAN party without fiddling around with your normal network configuration settings, Connectify looks like a winner. It's one of the coolest reasons to move up to Windows 7.
Comments
Comments are closed on this article
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scarletmilo.fr@...
October 04, 2010 at 8:08pm
hello, i am milo.
is there any possibililities if i already connected to another access point, but i want to make "internal" network with some of my friends using this connectify???
thank you,,
scarletmi milo
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srt1
August 11, 2010 at 12:39am
Our technical staff and customer’s relationship team is always ready to serve you at your destination. We guarantee to provide you the best products as well as pre sales and after sales support and services.
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nekollx
January 12, 2010 at 11:11am
no, some you know, you might want to drop the decade old OS...
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Modred189
November 05, 2009 at 11:33am
What a phenomenal app. Worked right away on my Acer netbook.
Now, to see if it allows me to use the internet on my ZuneHD without having to mess with my school's wireless login that the ZuneHD has issues with!
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nekollx
November 02, 2009 at 11:18am
i have a wireless router, and wifi computers can i have both streghtening each other...more to the point if my wifi pc is being a hotspot can it conenct wireless or need to be wired?
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Coming soon to Lulu.com --Tokusatsu Heroes--
Five teenagers, one alien ghost, a robot, and the fate of the world.
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Paul_Lilly
November 02, 2009 at 8:33am
Nice write-up, Mark. I'm anxious to kick Connectify's tires myself, but it didn't play nice with my notebook's WiFi. One of their support reps told me they "seem to having issues with some Intel wireless cards," but assured me they're working on a solution.
-Paul Lilly
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Mr.Pooney
November 02, 2009 at 8:02am
Could this also be used to setup a wireless network between 2 laptops to transfer files instead of using a usb key?
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Marcus_Soperus
November 02, 2009 at 9:42am
You can use Connectify the same way you'd use any other wireless network router, so if you set up shared folders with read/write access and the appropriate user settings on both laptops, you could use Connectify - but you could also set up an Ad-Hoc wireless connection as well.
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Marcus_Soperus
November 02, 2009 at 9:46am
Connectify uses WPA2 encryption (which uses the very strong AES encryption algorithm), which matches the strongest encryption standard available in wireless networking. Thus, as long as the PCs that need to connect with Connectify support WPA2, you'll be able to connect. Keep in mind that you're still running 802.11b or very early 802.11g hardware which don't support WPA2 on client PCs, you'll either need to update the drivers or replace the adapters on those PCs.
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It's amazing how illogical a business built on binary logic can be.
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