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The introduction should be roughly 120-130 words long. You’ve got great internet at work, but you have to go through the hassle of tethering your phone for connectivity at home—what a pain! But if you have this little WiFi adapter from Ralink, the days of clumsily connecting with your Android device are over. Pick up this device and connect to any open wireless network with an Android USB OTG-enabled device in seconds!Some things to mention: • It’s easy to use and works with most devices that support USB OTG • Connects into either your laptop or desktop computer • Compatible with Windows Vista or higher and Linux kernel 2. 6+ • Good signal strength • Fast internet from anywhere in the houseFor an example, see my step-by-step guide on how to do this with a Nexus 4.OSX has a built-in USB Host driver but you must connect your Mac with a Lightning to USB adapter before attempting any of the following, otherwise you’ll only be able to access the built-in storage provided.The five tips below are designed for a Macbook running 10.7 Lion or later. It is still possible to do it with earlier versions of OS X using different methods and may even work on 10. 6. The only versions of OS X where it may have issues are 10.4 and 10.5, so I’d advise against trying them until you know your device works with your version of OS X. With that in mind, here are the five tips I’ve found to help get Android devices working under OSX:Tip 1: Get the Android USB Driver Android devices come with a USB driver that allows them to interface with other devices like keyboards and mice, but it doesn’t play nice with Macs (or other PCs). So you’ll need to find the driver online and use it. Here are some links to get you started: • For Nexus devices : extract this Zip file for the USB driver files onto your desktop. You need either “android_winusb.inf” or “android_winusb.sys” for this to work. • For Samsung Galaxy S3 phones, extract this Zip file for the USB driver files onto your desktop. You need either “android_winusb.inf” or “android_winusb. sys” for this to work. • For the HTC One phones, extract this Zip file for the USB driver files onto your desktop. You need either “android_winusb.inf” or “android_winusb.sys” for this to work. • For Google Nexus 7 tablets, extract the zip on your desktop and call up the extracted folder which will have a file called “AndroidADBInterfaceV11-1-5(20110117). cfa1e77820
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