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The original Huawei E220 supports up to 3.6 Mbit/s, and can connect up to 7.2 Mbit/s with a firmware upgrade. The Vodafone K5150 Vodem is a CAT4 4G device, capable of download speeds of up to 150 Mbit/s on a 4G LTE network [3] and 42.2 Mbit/s with a dual-carrier network.
The E220 connects to the computer with a standard Mini USB cable. The device comes with two cables, one short and one long. The long one has two USB A interfaces, one used for data and power and the other optionally only for assistance power in case the computer is not able to provide the full 500 mA (milliamperes) required for the device to work from one USB interface only.
Major producers are Huawei, Option N.V., Novatel Wireless. More recently, the expression "connect card" is also used to identify internet USB keys. Vodafone brands this type of device as a Vodem. [5] Often a mobile network operator will supply a 'locked' modem or other wireless device that can only be used on their network.
External wireless modems include connect cards, USB modems, and cellular routers. Most GSM wireless modems come with an integrated SIM cardholder (i.e. Huawei E220 , Sierra 881.) Some models are also provided with a microSD memory slot and/or jack for additional external antenna, (Huawei E1762, Sierra Compass 885.) [ 62 ] [ 63 ]
Huawei E220 3G/GPRS Modem. USB 3G/GPRS modems have a terminal-like interface over USB with V.42bis, and RFC 1144 data formats. Some models include an external antenna connector. Modem cards for laptop PCs, or external USB modems are available, similar in shape and size to a computer mouse, or a pendrive.
Notable custom-firmware projects for wireless routers.Many of these will run on various brands such as Linksys, Asus, Netgear, etc. OpenWrt – Customizable FOSS firmware written from scratch; features a combined SquashFS/JFFS2 file system and the package manager opkg [1] with over 3000 available packages (Linux/GPL); now merged with LEDE.
In March 2010, Huawei achieved what it stated is a world-record 1.2 Gbit/s download speed on a demo network built around Huawei's prototype SingleRAN LTE-Advanced device. [13] In November that year, the company released a new SingleRAN technology, enabling operators to migrate between WiMAX and LTE TDD networks. [ 14 ]
Huawei launched the E5 at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February 2009. It was originally named the E583X [2] and is also known as the E5830/E5852. [3] The E5 offers high-speed wireless connectivity, providing users with group internet access, individual Wi-Fi hotspots and connection to devices such as notebooks, digital cameras and games consoles.