No, MACycle works directly with Windows' hostednetwork to do this, unfortunately.
Ah I see! I'll figured it out, thanks for the input!
No, MACycle works directly with Windows' hostednetwork to do this, unfortunately.
Use this one. "Make sure you have no connections saved on your 3DS at this point. You do not need to add the ConsoleNintendo3DS connection to your 3DS, it will work without adding it."Is there a way to use homepass without having the risk of downloading the update data?
You don't need nzone. It's not designed to work with it. MACycle works completely independent of any other applications (As of the V2.00 Beta 1.71, all previous versions use macshift to swap the MAC address) and shouldn't need anything else to run.Homepass worked fine with nzone.exe ... When i use this one, i select MAC ORDER and NETWORK ADAPTER ( i select the one created with nzone.exe on that one) , and it simply doesn't work....
If i try to host a new connection, nzone gives me error : "no hosted network compatible wireless interfaces found" and i couldn't fix that except for a system restore D:
Should i use MACycle alone? Or along with nzone.exe ? Sorry for not getting it correctly :/
Thanks in advance , Team Fail .
You don't need nzone. It's not designed to work with it. MACycle works completely independent of any other applications (As of the V2.00 Beta 1.71, all previous versions use macshift to swap the MAC address) and shouldn't need anything else to run.
So just open it, configure *mac order* and *network adapter* and i'm good to go ? It'll create the homepass automatically?
Not sure if it's OK to ask here, but I wanted to know the range of publicly used MAC addresses and also the range of private ones, since I wanted to have a isolated range of homepass to exchange data with select people. Would that be possible?
I don't believe so. The OP claims that you need to have a functioning HomePass already in place, and MACycle is just going to let you cycle through MAC addresses in nice ways rather than always going sequentially on fixed sets like nzone.exe.
However, nzone.exe does a decent job of configuring a HomePass for you, so you can potentially use nzone.exe to do that configuration and then just disable nzone.exe and use MACycle instead.
And last, you're finally getting streetpasses with ANY MAC, not because you was so smart to use your custom MAC list, but just because Nintendo does not stick streetpass data to the actual MAC but spreads it between MACs in Europe. So there is no much sence which actually MACs you're using with the european Nintendo Zone SSID.
If that's the case, why bother implementing sequential and random MAC cycling modes in MACycle? From your description it seems as though you claim the result would be the same either way.
Also, can you explain what the values in nzone.macs mean, and how nzone behaves differently in BASE16 and BASE256 operation?
Maccycle was released far before nzone for windows (I was concentrated on a Linux version which have no driver limitations).
When it stops changing MAC, just run nzone with no parameters, it will try to change to the next address and you will see the error if any.Wait, are you the author of nzone.exe? If so, can you tell me what the hostednetwork key is for ConsoleNintendo3DS, and how you knew to use it?
I had problems using nzone because over time, nzone would no longer stop/start my Wi-Fi adapter or change the hostednetwork MAC, even though the windows task was still enabled and running. Afterwards I tried MACycle and I attempted to set up Darkknigh_t's HomePass relay approach, doing ICS between an Ethernet adapter and the hostednetwork instead, but I never once got any receive data through the connection. Plus, without knowing the password that nzone uses when configuring the hostednetwork, I couldn't test the connection with any other non-3DS devices.
EDIT: Also, if you are the guy, thanks for your efforts.