Thinking the Unthinkable – Mobile Call by Call for International Calls

Thanks to the latest EU roaming regulation that went into effect last summer, it’s now possible to pretty much use a mobile subscription from any country in the EU in any other country in the EU at pretty much the same price like at home. Yes, there are quite some loopholes when it comes to the amount of data but let’s say the general rule holds true. In one particular case it is even significantly cheaper a mobile subscription abroad rather than in the home country: Making calls to a mobile subscriber in a third EU country.

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Raspbian Support Timeline

I have quite a lot of Raspberry Pis out there in the wild and quite some of them are still running on a Raspbian that is based on Debian 8 ‘Jessie’. I have no incentive, from an application point of view, to upgrade them to a new Debian version because you are never save from side effects. I speak from experience. Last time it broke my channel bonding redundancy setup. Another option is to re-install and configure the applications I use on a fresh install. But that’s not a trivial 5 minute task either.

This has become a bit of a concern to me because the current Raspberry Pi images are based on Debian 9 ‘Stretch’ and there isn’t a firm commitment on any official Raspberry Pi web page that I could find out how long security fixes will be provided for Debian 8 based Raspbian.

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Book Review – Artemis

Back in summer 2015 I read “The Martian” by Andy Weir and I found it so extraordinary that I read it in 2 days flat. I can’t remember when I’ve done that the last time. Now his latest novel is out: Artemis. I didn’t actually notice it at first, my ad filters seem to work pretty well. But then, he was interviewed by Leo Laporte on Triangulation and what can I say, I was instantly convinced to get a copy of his latest novel as well.

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Why a Linksys 1200AC and not a 1900AC or 3200ACM?

After posting my experiences with Open Source Software on the Linksys 1200AC router I got some questions around the topic of why I went for this router and not for one of its higher spec cousins such as the 1900AC or the 3200ACM!? The simple answer is that while in theory these routers offer faster over the air speeds, I won’t be able to use any of it in practice anytime soon.

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Running a Linksys 1200AC with Open Source Software

Linksys 1200AC Throughput GraphAfter some years it was time again to invest in new Wifi Access Point hardware for an upcoming event and as a replacement for pretty much outdated Wifi equipment that has become the bottleneck of the network. Obviously, I wanted a Wifi router on which I could run something free and open on. After having taken a look at different options my choice fell on the Linksys 1200AC as it is said to be easily upgradable to open source router software and has good 802.11ac features for a reasonable price (€120 euros including taxes). What was a bit shocking for me was how ‘mainstream’ vendor supplied software has actually become since I last bought a Wifi access point.

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Thinking the Unthinkable: The End of Circuit Switching

Quite a number of network operators are in the processes of shutting down their 2G or 3G networks or have already done so. A major example is AT&T who has switched off their 2G network back in 2017. In other words, they are now only running on their UMTS and LTE networks. So what will happen once they switch off UMTS as well?

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Intercontinental In-Flight Internet Is Slowing Down

Back in 2011 I had my first intercontinental in-flight Internet experience over satellite on a flight from New York to Europe. Back then I found the service extremely fast with sustained downlink speeds of 2.5 Mbit/s and 500 kbit/s in uplink. And this was 2011 when terrestrial 3G with similar speeds was the new kid on the block. Since then, things have unfortunately not improved.

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My Mobiles – 2009 to 2017

Back in 2009 I posted the list of the mobile phones I owned from 1998 up to that point. Back then and even today it is interesting to see how technology evolved in those 10 years from voice + sms only to GPRS and first Internet connectivity to 3G and multimedia. So almost another 10 years have passed since then and things have changed even more since then. Time to have a look.

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On Open Source Linux Client As A Cisco VPN Anyconnect Replacement

OpenConnect Client

I’m not very fond of having to install closed source software on a Linux systems I administrate and try to avoid if at all possible. Unfortunately I was very close at having to do just this recently when I needed to connect to a network behind a Cisco IPSec VPN gateway. Cisco has a software package for Linux for this but apart from it being not open source the installation process is far from confidence inspiring. But then I noticed that there is actually an open source Ubuntu NetworkManager plugin that can be installed straight from the Debian repository: OpenConnect!

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Base Station Visits Over The Years

changes side by sideIt is easy to assume that something as wide spread as a cellular network must be a mostly static installation that changes very slowly over time. As I will show in this post, however, this is hardly the case. Back in 2009 I moved into a place from which I have a very good view to a base station site across the street and since then I noticed quite a number of times that the base station configuration has changed significantly. On average, things have changed once very two years since then and I have taken pictures to document the process. The first picture shows the initial configuration ca. 2010 on the right. Two antenna configurations are stacked on top of each other and the lower configuration contains two antennas directly next to each other. In other words there were three physically separate antennas at this time.

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