User Tools

Site Tools


other:hardware:mudi

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
other:hardware:mudi [2023/02/22 00:45] rodolicoother:hardware:mudi [2023/02/22 00:49] (current) rodolico
Line 9: Line 9:
 https://store.gl-inet.com/collections/all/products/mudigl-e750-travel-4g-router https://store.gl-inet.com/collections/all/products/mudigl-e750-travel-4g-router
  
-It is actually a router, with [[https://openwrt.org/|OpenWrt]] installed (and Tor, and a bunch of other stuff). So, open source. That is a plus. Physically, it is slightly larger than a cell phone.+It is actually a router, with [[https://openwrt.org/|OpenWrt]] installed (and [[https://www.torproject.org/|Tor]], and a bunch of other stuff). So, open source. That is a plus. Physically, it is slightly larger than a cell phone, but a lot heavier due to the 7000 milliamp hour battery.
  
-It also has the ability to do wired networking. That is a major thing I wanted.+It also has the ability to do wired networking. That is a major thing I wanted. //And// it comes with the necessary hardware already (a USB-C dongle with a network connection and a power passthrough, so you can charge while using it).
  
 I got mine today, went to the T-Mobile store and got a SIM, plugged it in and booted up, connecting from my Chromebook using the simple instructions on the card included. Went through the very simple configuration screen and, boom, it is working. I'm not a big fan of "Automated Configuration" but this was a new machine, with warranty, so I tried it. It flawlessly found my SIM and set it up, making the connection. I then went through the configuration WebUI (they call it an MCU), changed my LAN IP, set my time zone, changed the admin password, wireless SSID, stuff like that. But, really, there was nothing to do if you wanted the default (which I consider a security problem, so I never do it). I got mine today, went to the T-Mobile store and got a SIM, plugged it in and booted up, connecting from my Chromebook using the simple instructions on the card included. Went through the very simple configuration screen and, boom, it is working. I'm not a big fan of "Automated Configuration" but this was a new machine, with warranty, so I tried it. It flawlessly found my SIM and set it up, making the connection. I then went through the configuration WebUI (they call it an MCU), changed my LAN IP, set my time zone, changed the admin password, wireless SSID, stuff like that. But, really, there was nothing to do if you wanted the default (which I consider a security problem, so I never do it).
other/hardware/mudi.txt · Last modified: 2023/02/22 00:49 by rodolico