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Wireless Internet: BlackBerry Curve as Bluetooth Modem for OS-X Mac

Stay connected to the Internet wherever you go by using your BlackBerry Curve (8300) as a Bluetooth modem for your OS-X-powered Macintosh…

[ Apple MacBook ] This tutorial guides you through the process of connecting wirelessly to the Internet using your BlackBerry Curve (8300) as a Bluetooth modem for your Macintosh (running OS X) via native Bluetooth functionality. The benefits of such wireless connectivity are numerous, enabling greater productivity and maximized Internet access. The procedure is straightforward, and the tutorial assumes no prior knowledge of either Bluetooth or BlackBerry. Knowing your way around a Mac will help, but is not required. Note that using your BlackBerry as a wireless modem for your Mac (or any computer) is classified as tethering, and may or may not be covered by your wireless plan1. Having said that, the setup time for this tutorial should be well under thirty minutes, and requires2 the following three items:

All set? Let’s get started…

Install the BlackBerry Modem Script

Unzip the BlackBerry_8300.zip file and save a copy of the extension-less modem-script to the “Modem Scripts” directory on your Mac: FinderHard DiskLibraryModem Scripts

Pair the BlackBerry Curve with your Mac

Okay, now to pair the BlackBerry and Mac via Bluetooth. Crack open your BlackBerry, go to “Manage Connections”, and enable Bluetooth via checkmark (the icon should then show a yellow minus icon). Then, go to “Bluetooth Options”, press the menu key, select “Options”, and ensure that the “Discoverable” option is set to “Yes”.

Now, open System Preferences on your Mac and open the “Bluetooth” configuration panel. Enable Bluetooth and make it “Discoverable” [ Screenshot ].

Next, within the System Preferences panel, select the “Devices” tab and click “Set Up New Device…” to begin the setup process [ Screenshot ].

The first step in the device setup process is a “Welcome” screen. Click continue. Next, in the “Select Device Type” screen, select “Any Device” from the list and click “Continue”. Next is the “Searching” screen, which eventually (it may take a few moments) should indicate your BlackBerry device as a mobile phone. After the device is found, select in the list and click “Continue”.

Next is the “Gathering Information” screen, which displays the progress of the information gathering process. Wait until the process is complete and then click “Continue”. The next screen displays the all-important passkey. [ Screenshot ]. At this time, your BlackBerry should display its “Enter Numeric Passkey” prompt. Enter the passkey in the field provided (Note: there is a limited amounted of time for this step — if necessary, click “Go back” on the Mac and try again).

Upon successful entry of the passkey, a “Pairing Complete” message appears briefly, and a confirmation prompt appears asking if you would like to “Accept connection request from mac?”. First, select “Don’t ask this again” and then click the “Yes” button.

Configure the Bluetooth Connection

[ Image: BlackBerry Curve and Mac PowerBook ]
BlackBerry Wireless Modem for Mac
So far so good. We are almost finished! Now it is time to configure the Bluetooth connection. On your Mac, the “Devices” subpanel (System PreferencesBluetoothDevices tab) should display the BlackBerry 8300 on the Bluetooth device list [ Screenshot ]. Select the BlackBerry 8300 from the list and click on “Configure” to open the configuration dialogue (Note: the Device Configuration dialogue may have opened automatically after the device pairing process).

Next, in the “Select the services you want to use with your mobile phone” screen, select “Access the Internet with your phone’s data connection” and also select “Use a direct, higher speed connection to reach your Internet Service Provider (GPRS, 1xRTT)” [ Screenshot ]. Click “Continue”.

Then, in the Username/Password screen, leave the username and password fields blank, and enter *99***1# for the GPRS CID String. For the modem, click the dropdown menu and select the custom modem script, “BlackBerry 8300”. And finally, select “Show Modem status in the menu bar” and then click “Continue” [ Screenshot ].

Upon successful completion of the device configuration process, the “Congratulations” screen will display: “Accessing the Internet using a high speed wireless data service (e.g. GPRS) from your wireless operator.” — Excellent. Click “Quit” to seal the deal.

Connect to the Internet via BlackBerry

With everything properly connected and configured, we are ready now to connect to the Internet. Click on the small ‘Modem Status’ (telephone) icon in your menu bar and select “Open Internet Connect…” [ Screenshot ].

Within the Connections dialogue box, select the Bluetooth tab and populate the form fields with the following information:

  • Telephone: wap.voicestream.com (T-Mobile) or wap.cingular (Cingular/AT&T)
  • Username: guest (T-Mobile) or WAP@CINGULARGPRS.COM (Cingular/AT&T)
  • Password: guest (T-Mobile) or CINGULAR1 (Cingular/AT&T)
  • Screenshot ]

All set? Click “Connect”! If everything went according to plan, your Mac should be using your BlackBerry Curve as a Bluetooth modem and you should now see the “Connection Status” dialogue box, indicating connectivity [ Screenshot ].

Footnotes

  • 1 For Cingular/At&T subscribers: According to the customer service department, unless your plan specifically supports tethering, tethered connections will only work until the system catches on and blacklists your device (only as a tethered modem). Also, the representative assured me that pre-blacklist connections would not be billed.
  • 2 These are the devices used for the production of this tutorial. It may be possible to connect via alternate devices/software with similar features.
  • 3 Different carriers provide different data/internet access plans and thus have different connection credentials (e.g., username, password). While covering every different plan is waaay beyond the scope of this article, the tutorial does provide connection credentials for both Cingular/AT&T and T-Mobile.

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281 responses to “Wireless Internet: BlackBerry Curve as Bluetooth Modem for OS-X Mac”

  1. Fernando,

    What version of OS X? 10.4 or 10.5?

  2. Bob Jackson 2007/11/27 2:11 pm

    Fernando

    What cell carrier, what OS on the Macbook and what BB OS? Have you used it for more than 5 minutes?

  3. Fernando,

    What version of OS X? 10.4 or 10.5? Thanks.

  4. Not really sure how to find out which OS my BB is using, but i see a v4.2.2.123 (platform 3.0.0.64) in the about part of the settings.

  5. Bob Jackson 2007/11/27 2:24 pm

    What phone service? What Mac OS? Is this phone brand new? You may have the first working Curve (8320) to Mac known to man.

  6. Not sure if your question is directed to me, but to answer the questions..

    I am actually not on a curve, but an 8830. I searched wrong before.

    Carrier is Sprint

    OSX is 10.4

    The phone is brand new, but i have had 3 other blackberry’s replaced this month, and all 4 have worked.

    I have tried it while driving (yes, unsafe, but had to see). In Orlando, Jacksonville, and Tampa. As long as I have signal it works.

  7. Bob Jackson 2007/11/27 2:42 pm

    Scott

    Sorry, I was hoping to get more info from Fernando. By the way, was it running fast, or like dial-up?

  8. It’s actually quite fast. I did a speed test and results were 304kb/s down and 120kb/s up. Not too bad.

    Posting connected via phone at the moment.

  9. Bob Jackson 2007/11/27 5:10 pm

    Got it. I think. The problem with the Curve 8320 is simple. It can’t have both networks on at once. Go to Manage Connections and Turn off the Wifi option. It fails when both are enabled. Still very erratic compared to other tether solutions, but working. Makes total sense, the dual networks is what makes Curve the special child.

  10. I wish it were that easy. I tried that from the get-go. Is it working for you now?

  11. Bob Jackson 2007/11/27 5:40 pm

    Qualify working. Yes, it works, but erratically. Sudden bursts of speed, then sluggish. Stays up for 20 minutes. You can sign in and off without resetting the battery most of the time. Enable both networks and it is on its back in a flash. I think it is prone to confusion. For instance, it seems to fail if the BB gets a message while I am tethered. I am on 10.5.1, but I don’t think that is the difference. I tested that before and it sucked as bad as 10.4.10.

    Retry with just Mobile and see what happens.

  12. David Sanders 2007/11/27 5:53 pm

    I’ve never enabled WiFi on my Curve so it was certainly disabled when I was trying to get tethering to work. I’m not convinced this is the silver bullet we’re all looking for!

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