Friday, June 19, 2009 #

iPhone 3.0, tethering and me….

Like all good geeks as soon as a software update for one of my toys comes out I apply it, so when the 3.0 update for the iPhone came out I was right there.

I had hoped that it would resolve some issues I had been having with my phone, it did not, but Apple did replace the phone for me when I took it to them. 

The problem is that when I had upgraded the phone (even before the hardware switch) my backup did not restore the applications I had on my phone, for the most part that was fine because they were still available; the thing is NetShare (a socks proxy to enable tethering with the phone) was not.

With that in mind I was left looking for an alternative, it’s not that I used it frequently but there have been times where that’s been supper useful.

Being a gadget hound I follow Engadget, they recently had a post about how to enable the native tethering support of iPhone 3.0; I followed the steps and viola, tethering showed up in the UI.

I paired the device with my Windows 7 machine and I saw a new device, but no driver was found; its HW ID was:

BTHENUM\{00000000-deca-fade-deca-deafdecacafe}_VID&000205ac_PID&1292.

Notice the strange service ID in the HW ID, (looks like someone needs to get a copy of GENGUID), in any event with some research on the web and some help from some folks I work with I discovered this is ID maps to something called “Wireless iAP” which is supposedly an Apple proprietary Bluetooth profile for a Wireless Internet Access Point.

The problem is that that there is no profile for this in Windows 7 and I have not been able to find a third-party profile I can load; I may get there, and if I do I will update this post but for now it looks like I may be out of luck.

I wonder why they did not use the standard profiles for this stuff, oh well.

[Update 6/22/09 11:00AM] I am a idiot, yes; turns out I did not have Tethering "ON" when I tried this; once I did that it worked just fine... 100% user error; just tried the connetion via speedtest.net and I was getting .60 down and .20 up.

This begs the question what is this "Wireless iAP" thing, its clearly not required for this scenario.

 

 

posted @ Friday, June 19, 2009 9:31 PM | Feedback (3)