It was some special offer on our AT&T small business site. Maybe they were $40 each. I wasn't the one that ordered them but I know they were pretty cheap and so far working fine!
Adam Kennedy | Network & Systems Engineer Broadband Networks A Watch Communications Company PO Box 8 | Rushville, Indiana | 46173 Tel - 866-586-1518 | Fax - 866-567-3897 adamkenn...@broadbandnetworks.com www.broadbandnetworks.com On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 8:08 AM, Ray Orsini <r...@orsiniit.com> wrote: > We use those a lot with mobile hotspots. Where did you find them for $20? > We > usually pay about 2x that much for used untis. > > Regards, > Ray Orsini – CEO > Orsini IT, LLC – Technology Consultants > VOICE DATA BANDWIDTH SECURITY SUPPORT > P: 305.967.6756 x1009 E: r...@orsiniit.com TF: 844.OIT.VOIP > 7900 NW 155th Street, Suite 103, Miami Lakes, FL 33016 > http://www.orsiniit.com | View My Calendar | View/Pay Your Invoices | View > Your Tickets > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Adam Kennedy > Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2016 12:56 AM > To: frnk...@iname.com > Cc: John Levine <jo...@iecc.com>; nanog@nanog.org > Subject: Re: SMS gateways > > I picked up two of the AT&T "Beam" USB devices that use the LTE network. > Netgear is the listed manufacturer and has firmware for the units that > makes > them usable on Linux. I loaded the driver for those into a Debian box and > I'm able to use smstools open source software to send SMS from the unit > directly to cell network. The AT&T Beam's were $20 I think and cost us > about > $15/mo as additional lines on our corporate plan. > > > Adam Kennedy | Network & Systems Engineer > > Broadband Networks > > A Watch Communications Company > > PO Box 8 | Rushville, Indiana | 46173 > > Tel - 866-586-1518 | Fax - 866-567-3897 > > adamkenn...@broadbandnetworks.com > > www.broadbandnetworks.com > > On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 12:52 AM, Adam Kennedy <adamkenn...@watchcomm.net> > wrote: > > > I picked up two of the AT&T "Beam" USB devices that use the LTE network. > > Netgear is the listed manufacturer and has firmware for the units that > > makes them usable on Linux. I loaded the driver for those into a > > Debian box and I'm able to use smstools open source software to send > > SMS from the unit directly to cell network. The AT&T Beam's were $20 I > > think and cost us about $15/mo as additional lines on our corporate plan. > > > > > > Adam Kennedy | Network & Systems Engineer > > > > Broadband Networks > > > > A Watch Communications Company > > > > PO Box 8 | Rushville, Indiana | 46173 > > > > Tel - 866-586-1518 | Fax - 866-567-3897 > > > > adamkenn...@broadbandnetworks.com > > > > www.broadbandnetworks.com > > > > On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 11:38 PM, <frnk...@iname.com> wrote: > > > >> I plan to continue living in a rural area with a GSM provider that > >> will support 2G. =) > >> > >> Frank > >> > >> -----Original Message----- > >> From: John Levine [mailto:jo...@iecc.com] > >> Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2016 5:24 PM > >> To: nanog@nanog.org > >> Cc: frnk...@iname.com > >> Subject: Re: SMS gateways > >> > >> In article <006501d14b31$7c478e40$74d6aac0$@iname.com> you write: > >> >Surprised no one has mentioned the Multimodem iSMS: > >> http://www.multitech.com/brands/multimodem-isms > >> > > >> >Been using it for 5+ years -- first three years the code wasn't > >> >stable, > >> needing a reboot every few months, > >> >but the latest code has been stable for 2+ years. > >> > >> It looked interesting until I got to the part where it says it uses a > >> 2G GSM modem. AT&T has said quite firmly that they will turn off > >> their 2G network in 2017, and press reports say that T-Mobile is > >> already turning off 2G in favor of LTE. > >> > >> What do you plan to do instead next year? > >> > >> > >> > >> > > >