I agree, it looks like a nice board!
But… after ordering it I noticed that while the pictures in the website show the “SIM7600G-H” chip - which supports global GSM and LTE bands - the text description specifies that the chip included in the kit is the “SIM7600CE-T”, which supports the Chinese bands. I am not sure I will get the correct version now 😅 But there are many other “SIM7600G-H” modules and USB dongles available out there, and from what I have found this chip is a nice option for GSM/LTE projects.
TheHolm@aussie.zone 8 months ago
Very strange line from specs. USB Driver Windows XP/7/8/10/11, Linux (driver free on Raspberry Pi Raspbian system) Does it mean binary blob driver only? and you need to pay for it to use it on PC?
solrize@lemmy.world 8 months ago
I think it means that on Linux, no driver is needed (“driver-free” = free of drivers) since it uses the kernel USB stack. On windows there may be a USB driver that gets loaded. But you’re right, it’s ambiguous.
SpicyAnt@mander.xyz 8 months ago
Yeah, it is written funny. But what it means is that the Linux kernel already comes pre-packaged with the drivers necessary to communicate using the protocol used by this device (UART). These Linux drivers (and by extension Raspbian) are natively capable of interfacing via the GPIO pins or via the USB connectors. It is not true that the device is “driver free” as you always need a driver for this, what they meant is that it is not necessary to install any additional drivers for Linux. So “free from installation” I suppose.
Windows does not come pre-packaged with these drivers, so you need to install them if you want to interface with the device via USB. The chip that the board uses for the UART -> USB conversion is the CP2102. This chip is a common chip used in some ESP32 boards, and I think it would work fine with the standard CP210x driver. But on their site they do provide a specific driver for free (SIMCOM_Windows_USB_Drivers_V1.0.2.exe)