How do you connect a PC to a mobile network?











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Using a SIM card, and a SIM card reader, what other equipment do you need to connect a computer that doesn't have support for cellular connectivity to a cellular network?



My understanding of SIM cards and mobile networks is that they are simply smart cards that only authenticate your access to a mobile network and that the cellular device is what actually facilitates the mobile connection.










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  • Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 16 at 4:28










  • Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
    – grawity
    Nov 16 at 9:24










  • It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
    – jcaron
    Nov 16 at 15:43










  • You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
    – Peter.G
    Nov 20 at 9:13















up vote
5
down vote

favorite












Using a SIM card, and a SIM card reader, what other equipment do you need to connect a computer that doesn't have support for cellular connectivity to a cellular network?



My understanding of SIM cards and mobile networks is that they are simply smart cards that only authenticate your access to a mobile network and that the cellular device is what actually facilitates the mobile connection.










share|improve this question






















  • Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 16 at 4:28










  • Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
    – grawity
    Nov 16 at 9:24










  • It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
    – jcaron
    Nov 16 at 15:43










  • You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
    – Peter.G
    Nov 20 at 9:13













up vote
5
down vote

favorite









up vote
5
down vote

favorite











Using a SIM card, and a SIM card reader, what other equipment do you need to connect a computer that doesn't have support for cellular connectivity to a cellular network?



My understanding of SIM cards and mobile networks is that they are simply smart cards that only authenticate your access to a mobile network and that the cellular device is what actually facilitates the mobile connection.










share|improve this question













Using a SIM card, and a SIM card reader, what other equipment do you need to connect a computer that doesn't have support for cellular connectivity to a cellular network?



My understanding of SIM cards and mobile networks is that they are simply smart cards that only authenticate your access to a mobile network and that the cellular device is what actually facilitates the mobile connection.







wireless-networking






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asked Nov 16 at 4:04









DaMaxContent

1285




1285












  • Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 16 at 4:28










  • Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
    – grawity
    Nov 16 at 9:24










  • It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
    – jcaron
    Nov 16 at 15:43










  • You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
    – Peter.G
    Nov 20 at 9:13


















  • Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 16 at 4:28










  • Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
    – grawity
    Nov 16 at 9:24










  • It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
    – jcaron
    Nov 16 at 15:43










  • You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
    – Peter.G
    Nov 20 at 9:13
















Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
– Appleoddity
Nov 16 at 4:28




Most people connect a computer to a cellular network using a WiFi mobile hotspot.
– Appleoddity
Nov 16 at 4:28












Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
– grawity
Nov 16 at 9:24




Well, yes, but the "mobile hotspot" is still just a cellular modem regardless of its shape.
– grawity
Nov 16 at 9:24












It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
– jcaron
Nov 16 at 15:43




It's a bit unusual to have a SIM card reader not part of a modem. Are you sure you don't actually have a modem that includes that reader?
– jcaron
Nov 16 at 15:43












You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
– Peter.G
Nov 20 at 9:13




You can use USB to share your mobile network with PC. You can refer to: makeuseof.com/tag/tethering-use-mobile-internet-pc
– Peter.G
Nov 20 at 9:13










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
9
down vote



accepted










Nowadays most people use an LTE personal Wi-Fi hotspot, or enable the personal hotspot or tethering feature of their smartphone.



If you don't want a separate device with its own power to manage, then you need a cellular radio card (a.k.a. "wireless modem", "LTE modem", "LTE USB stick" etc. ). You can buy them from Sierra Wireless, Novatel, ZTE, Huawei, and others. They cost as low as $25 US. It's a different radio technology than Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It's probably best to contact your wireless carrier and ask if they have a preferred USB LTE modem for their network. The modem will have its own SIM card slot.






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
    – sleske
    Nov 16 at 11:25






  • 1




    Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
    – Skipper
    Nov 16 at 12:34










  • It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
    – kasperd
    Nov 16 at 15:12






  • 1




    @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:36










  • @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:40


















up vote
4
down vote













You need a mobile hotspot, or a cellular modem. Both devices connect to a cellular network and need a data plan from that cellular provider.






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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    9
    down vote



    accepted










    Nowadays most people use an LTE personal Wi-Fi hotspot, or enable the personal hotspot or tethering feature of their smartphone.



    If you don't want a separate device with its own power to manage, then you need a cellular radio card (a.k.a. "wireless modem", "LTE modem", "LTE USB stick" etc. ). You can buy them from Sierra Wireless, Novatel, ZTE, Huawei, and others. They cost as low as $25 US. It's a different radio technology than Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It's probably best to contact your wireless carrier and ask if they have a preferred USB LTE modem for their network. The modem will have its own SIM card slot.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 7




      Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
      – sleske
      Nov 16 at 11:25






    • 1




      Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
      – Skipper
      Nov 16 at 12:34










    • It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
      – kasperd
      Nov 16 at 15:12






    • 1




      @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:36










    • @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:40















    up vote
    9
    down vote



    accepted










    Nowadays most people use an LTE personal Wi-Fi hotspot, or enable the personal hotspot or tethering feature of their smartphone.



    If you don't want a separate device with its own power to manage, then you need a cellular radio card (a.k.a. "wireless modem", "LTE modem", "LTE USB stick" etc. ). You can buy them from Sierra Wireless, Novatel, ZTE, Huawei, and others. They cost as low as $25 US. It's a different radio technology than Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It's probably best to contact your wireless carrier and ask if they have a preferred USB LTE modem for their network. The modem will have its own SIM card slot.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 7




      Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
      – sleske
      Nov 16 at 11:25






    • 1




      Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
      – Skipper
      Nov 16 at 12:34










    • It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
      – kasperd
      Nov 16 at 15:12






    • 1




      @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:36










    • @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:40













    up vote
    9
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    9
    down vote



    accepted






    Nowadays most people use an LTE personal Wi-Fi hotspot, or enable the personal hotspot or tethering feature of their smartphone.



    If you don't want a separate device with its own power to manage, then you need a cellular radio card (a.k.a. "wireless modem", "LTE modem", "LTE USB stick" etc. ). You can buy them from Sierra Wireless, Novatel, ZTE, Huawei, and others. They cost as low as $25 US. It's a different radio technology than Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It's probably best to contact your wireless carrier and ask if they have a preferred USB LTE modem for their network. The modem will have its own SIM card slot.






    share|improve this answer














    Nowadays most people use an LTE personal Wi-Fi hotspot, or enable the personal hotspot or tethering feature of their smartphone.



    If you don't want a separate device with its own power to manage, then you need a cellular radio card (a.k.a. "wireless modem", "LTE modem", "LTE USB stick" etc. ). You can buy them from Sierra Wireless, Novatel, ZTE, Huawei, and others. They cost as low as $25 US. It's a different radio technology than Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It's probably best to contact your wireless carrier and ask if they have a preferred USB LTE modem for their network. The modem will have its own SIM card slot.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 16 at 15:35

























    answered Nov 16 at 5:42









    Spiff

    76k10116158




    76k10116158








    • 7




      Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
      – sleske
      Nov 16 at 11:25






    • 1




      Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
      – Skipper
      Nov 16 at 12:34










    • It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
      – kasperd
      Nov 16 at 15:12






    • 1




      @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:36










    • @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:40














    • 7




      Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
      – sleske
      Nov 16 at 11:25






    • 1




      Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
      – Skipper
      Nov 16 at 12:34










    • It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
      – kasperd
      Nov 16 at 15:12






    • 1




      @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:36










    • @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
      – Spiff
      Nov 16 at 15:40








    7




    7




    Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
    – sleske
    Nov 16 at 11:25




    Hm... on amazon.com, an LTE USB stick goes for 20-50 US$. Where did you get the $200 figure?
    – sleske
    Nov 16 at 11:25




    1




    1




    Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
    – Skipper
    Nov 16 at 12:34




    Also many high-end Lenovo and Dell laptops have LTE build-in modems nowadays. In that case You just need to check where the SIM card slot is.
    – Skipper
    Nov 16 at 12:34












    It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
    – kasperd
    Nov 16 at 15:12




    It sounds like the question is looking for something even more basic as the machine already has a SIM card reader.
    – kasperd
    Nov 16 at 15:12




    1




    1




    @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:36




    @sleske Thanks, fixed. I think I was only looking at the longstanding brands I trust and not the recent import brands.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:36












    @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:40




    @kasperd A SIM card is just a smart card variant that the wireless telephony industry adopted, and I've seen people confuse the two before, so I figured OP just had a smart card reader and he didn't realize it had nothing to do with wireless data service.
    – Spiff
    Nov 16 at 15:40












    up vote
    4
    down vote













    You need a mobile hotspot, or a cellular modem. Both devices connect to a cellular network and need a data plan from that cellular provider.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      You need a mobile hotspot, or a cellular modem. Both devices connect to a cellular network and need a data plan from that cellular provider.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        You need a mobile hotspot, or a cellular modem. Both devices connect to a cellular network and need a data plan from that cellular provider.






        share|improve this answer












        You need a mobile hotspot, or a cellular modem. Both devices connect to a cellular network and need a data plan from that cellular provider.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 16 at 5:33









        Keltari

        49k17113163




        49k17113163






























             

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