Generally I was pretty pleased with the stick. This is how it looks like on a side of a Lenovo Ideapad S10: The mobile partner has features to lock it into LTE-mode and it indicates the connection type of 3G WCDMA, 3G DC and LTE properly. After you install the drivers and the software, there is pretty much no way of telling that you are not running on a 3G but a 4G. As you would expect, when the USB-stick is inserted, it appears as a CD-drive with the classic Huawei Mobile Partner setup in the "disc". I still remember how big a Huawei E220 felt when the 2nd gen 3G-sticks (E160/ E169/etc.) came. In general it resembles your average Huawei 3G-stick a lot, the only difference is that it is little bit wider. Then you can insert a mini SIM-card (in my pic there is a micro-SIM to mini-SIM adapter sleeve): You open the stick by sliding the white cover to left. See this vid (with cheesy music) to see an external antenna connected to a Huawei. On the side there is a slot for MicroSD-card and a standard CRC9-connector which Huawei is using for all of its USB-products. The newer 4G modulation of TDD is not available. According to it has following frequencies available in FDD: 800 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, 2100 MHz and 2600 MHz. The model I tested appears to be a model s-150.
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