I must say, however, I never tried it with any other russian operators - the only SIM-cards I was using it with were the ones from norwegian operators ( Telia and Phonero).Īnd it is available for purchase even today: If memory serves me well, I did not perform any unlocking operations, and it just works fine with SIM-cards from other operators than Megafon. The reason for such a low price is usually that modems are locked to a particular operator, but in my case surprisingly that wasn’t the case. Back then it cost me just ~700 RUB (10-20 USD?). I bought it several years ago in Moscow at some Megafon selling point. Note that it requires full-sized SIM-cards. On top of that it has slots for external antennas and even a slot for microSD card ( don’t know what to do with it): The modem itself is rather a great piece of hardware.Ĭoming in a form-factor of a USB-stick, it is capable of maintaining quite a high-speed internet connection, and apparently it supports all the international LTE standards because I was using it in several countries without problems. So I have this 4G+/LTE modem - Huawei E3372, also known as Megafon M150-2 - which is exactly the variation I got.Įventually I got sick of its connection management software for Mac OS ( the one that comes from Megafon), so I started looking for a way to be able to connect to the internet on Mac OS without it.
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