Check that your firewall isn't blocking the connection we want to use. Probably best to disable it first, get these things running and then enable it again, possibly changing some settings for it.
Set up an Incoming Connection for Bluetooth as described by
Troy Fontaine. Make sure PC-Suite/mRouter isn't enabled for the Bluetooth serial port.
If you are able to hand out real addresses on your local area network, this is enough. If not, read further.
Set the Incoming Connection to hand out addresses from a private range, e.g. 10.0.0.1-10.0.0.254. Remove Internet Connection Sharing from all interfaces. Enable NAT on your Windows XP box by typing in a CMD window:
netsh routing ip nat install
netsh routing ip nat add interface "YOUR LAN INTERFACE NAME" full
netsh routing ip nat add interface Internal private
Look up the interface name in the control panel network connections. Note that the 'Internal' name will depend on the language of your Windows XP (e.g. in Finnish it's 'Sisäinen' instead).
I don't know about WAP on the 6600, since it's WAP 2.0 now. The Nokia gateway might support it, or might not. I don't know how to tell the phone who to connect.
On the phone
This will modify your communications settings. Back up your phone first! If you are actually using GSM-data for something, this will break it. You should be able to get the settings back by selecting Options|1Box phone in Gnubox.
Create a new Access Point on the phone (Setting|Connection|Access points|New access point|Use default settings).
Use the following settings for it:
Name: Bt. The name is important, the software will look for it.
Data Bearer: GSM data
Dial-up number: e.g. 2222. It doesn't matter what you have here as long as it's not empty
Username: a username that can log in on your Windows box
Promp password: No
Password: password for the user on Windows
Authentication: Normal
Advanced Settings: Use Login Script Yes
Advanced Settings: Login Script
CHARMAP [windows-1252]
LOOP 10
{
SEND "CLIENT"+<0x0d>
WAIT 3
{
"SERVER" OK
}
}
EXIT KErrNoAnswer$
OK:
EXIT
be careful that you get it exactly as show here, including linebreaks. You could save it to a file, send to the phone and copy-paste to the settings.
Advanced Settings: Use PPP Compression Yes
Run gnubox and select Options|2box Direct|Bluetooth and select your laptop. It should list the new settings and switch to a light blue background if everyting works ok.
Activate the WAP browser (Services). Change the default access point to Bt (Options|Settings|Default access points).
Now you should be able to surf to the Bt bookmark!
For sync set the sync profile to use the Bt access point.