I've no idea how local it is, but there is a whole range of "british indian" meals that are a not true indian recipes, but a mashup of what could be attempted given the limited local ingredients that the 1st gen of indian immigrants had access to. It's created a whole new genre of Indian food that you only get here, much of it is very localised
Mainly comes from the '70s and kinda stuck around even after it became possible to get authentic ingredients easily
I imagine, without the benefit of facts to back me up, that the excerpt is the most useful thing, being as it is a useful indicator to know if you are inserting the correct tag on placing a question.
but the answer is yes, I'm sure it's possible, it's not a hardware limitation, but you are going to have to crack out the terminal because you can't do it easily in network preferences
This question is an extension of this question. While my answer did answer the question, there was one part that wasn't answered. I answered how to create a hotspot. So here's my question: how do I share a Wi-fi connection via a Wi-fi hotspot?
And I'm trying to convince the guy who taught it to help me tackle a project I've had in mind for a few years--a pair of leather "tactical" pants. (Perfect for night ops at Burning Man)
then you have 2 subnets running over the same wifi card. Your 192.168.x.x (for example) that has a default route to the internet through your normal router on your original wifi card
And another on a different subnet - use 172.17.x.x
And now I'm wondering if an Airport Express connected to the ethernet port of a mac so-equipped would serve as a wireless bridge. Can't test here, but will do so tomorrow.