Hosted network support isn't needed for mobile hotspot in new versions of Windows 10. Searching online for sulutions, I found several posts claiming that this was the problem - as far as I understand the state of things, however, this is outdated information. Driver doesn't support hosted network (netsh wlan show drivers).The wifi device isn't ready after the first restart (Code 56 = still setting up class for device warning in Device Manager).The solution was to just wait the install completed eventually. I even aborted one install because it was stuck at 54% for ages. TP-Link driver install hangs for a long time, both with TL-WN725N and T4U.Most solutions are picked from online discussions and articles however, some information out there is outdated and it's also better to have them in one place. Issues I encountered & solutions that worked for me - YMMV. I also tried to revert back to the TL-WN725N in one of the attempts to figure out what was wrong. WiFi started up fine, but the hotspot didn't work. Perhaps others have the same problems and these points might help them troubleshoot.īasically, I was upgrading from the TL-WN725N to the T4U v3, uninstalled the old drivers and installed the new ones. However, during both my previous install (TL-WN725N) and this one (T4U v3) I encountered several hurdles before I could make them work. I mostly use these devices to create a hotspot at work for my phones to connect to the cabled Ethernet connection, and a full fledged router isn't an option, so I need the mobile hotspot function to work properly. This isn't a request for help, I'm just documenting how I made my new USB wifi adapter work with Mobile hotspot on Windows 10.
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