Any experience with SIM7600G-H 4G Dongle?
from snd@discuss.tchncs.de to privacy@lemmy.ml on 27 Jan 21:57
https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/53694546

A couple of weeks ago, I stumbled across this little device: www.waveshare.com/sim7600g-h-4g-dongle.htm. According to its documentation, it is able to write SMS, provide mobile internet, and allow making phone calls (which is quite rare). Does anyone have any experience with this device? And if yes, does it just work with Linux applications like gnome-calls (I know that this issue gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/calls/-/issues/680 exists, but it is basically inactive)?

My goal would be to replace my phone entirely. Currently, I only need my phone for Signal as a primary device as well as for basic smartphone stuff, such as SMS, mobile internet, and calls.

#privacy

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Neptr@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Jan 07:29 next collapse

For ditching Signal on mobile, you can use Flare, an unofficial Signal desktop app built from scratch, which supports setting it up as the primary device. It is recommended to use the Flare in conjunction with the official Signal desktop app so that you get all of the features without compromises.

snd@discuss.tchncs.de on 28 Jan 07:55 collapse

Thanks. I already looked at Flare. Even though primary device support has been implemented (gitlab.com/schmiddi-on-mobile/flare/-/issues/128), the last time I used it this feature was disabled by default, because the developer strongly advises user not to use it (gitlab.com/schmiddi-on-mobile/flare/-/…/94).

Neptr@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Jan 07:35 collapse

You could use a VOIP provider so you can do calls and SMS from your computer without needing a SIM. An example provider is JMP.chat, which could then be used with any fully featured desktop XMPP app, like Dino or Gajim.