Nur lokaler 3G-Router über Breitbandgerät?

567
GateKiller

Ich suche nach dem Namen / Typ des Geräts, das Folgendes tut:

  • Stellt eine Verbindung zum Internet über Ethernet oder WLAN her
  • erzeugt dann ein "falsches" 3G-Signal, mit dem sich mein iPhone verbinden kann.

Das 3G-Siginal in meinem Büro ist sehr schwach oder nicht vorhanden und ich brauche eine Möglichkeit, es zu verstärken oder zu ersetzen.

1
Einkaufsfragen sind offtopic, deshalb bearbeite ich die Anfrage für Händler aus dieser Frage heraus. quack quixote vor 13 Jahren 0

3 Antworten auf die Frage

4
BloodPhilia

You can't do this, you can't just replicate a 3G signal. The 3G signal is encrypted with a routing encryption and decrypted by your phone. Besides it being non-existant for consumers, your provider uses broadcasting frequencies that are restricted for other devices so even if such a device would be made, it would be illegal.

Doesn't your phone have Wi-Fi capability?

UPDATE:

A friend pointed me to this, may be possible to make a booster antenna: http://www.horstedkeynes.com/homemade3g.html However, these people still run into problems trying to create one.

Look here for professional solutions: http://www.cellantenna.com/index.php?id=mobileinfo

1
drewk

I have an AT&T microcell site in my house. It connects to my cable model broadband but then replicates an AT&T cell site in my house. It works well for voice, but not so great for data. They are slowly rolling it out nationally.

More HERE

0
RussellW

This isn't a direct answer, but some supplementary information that could be useful to other interested parties.

The technology the poster is referring to is femtocell, the ability of a small device to act as a repeater for cellular phones that routes traffic through a broadband connection rather than through the traditional cell site and backhaul network: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femtocell

This is promising technology that has not been adopted, primarily because the femtocell is using bandwidth purchased by the customer for broadband instead of the bandwidth as part of the cell site and towers. Imagine the AT&T user paying AT&T for minutes on the iPhone that are routed on a Qwest provided DSL backhaul.