@lsquare You don´t need to remove the battery to improve battery lifetime. With direct power supply mode the router works without charging the battery.
I hope there will be software integrated that automatically switches to direct power supply mode once the battery is fully charged, and a choice to tell the device as of when to start charging again.
What I mean: A software where the user can tell the Mudi 7 to only start charging if the device falls below a given percentage that the user can choose. (i.e. charge up to 100% then switch to direct power supply mode automatically and then I tell the device only to start charging again if the battery falls below XX % of charge (i.e. could be 50%). This would help save the battery lifetime a lot.
Competitors state i.e. that its device would make sure to keep the charge in direct power supply mode to 40%-60% at least in direct power supply mode. So this is kind of it. From my experience in direct power supply mode on my current device the battery loses about 1% of capacity every 24-36 hours. So it would take about 3-5 month until the battery is empty in direct power supply mode.
The AC power gets bypassed the battery when direct power supply mode is chosen.
I have this on my ZTE U60 Pro already. It is fully functional connected to USB-C power but battery does not get charged at all (as a matter of fact it will lose about 1% every 24-36 hours which is normal battery drain). I use it 24/7 in a camper this way.
Yes, when the battery is fully charged, it will disconnect from charging and be powered by an external power source. The battery can now rest.All GL routers with battery can do this.
Will the device be able to switch over to battery if it is disconnected quickly enough? For example, if the device is being powered by an external PSU and bypassing the battery, and the user unplugs the device from that external power, will it switch to the battery quickly enough to ensure operations continue without a reboot?
Has anyone in the beta had a chance to test this with Tmobile home internet?
I have the spitz az but would love to move to this since im on the go a bunch. Im assuming you can change the IMEI just like on the Spitz but didnt want to make assumptions with new products
When were emails getting sent out? I was under the impression that we would get emails if we do or dont get accepted. I know at this point that I wasnt, but it is nice to know why we may not have been selected.
This information cannot be announced at the moment, please wait for the official website to release.
A little bigger than the Mudi v2, but not too heavy.
I think it would be useful to be more active in GL-related communities, such as contributing more, helping more, and filling in beta program form questions completely.
If you are successfully selected, you will receive an email; if you are not selected, will not email, sorry.
The Mudi E750 is 300Mbps (2.4GHz), 433Mbps (5GHz), adding those together gives you the 750 model number, same on the legacy AR750.
So E5800 is more than likely BE5800, so WiFi 7 with a maximum throughput of 5800 Mbps.
Looking at other BE5800 devices, they are Tri-band but only max of two bands simultaneous MLO, so I imagine that the device is going to give a choice of 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz simultaneous or 6Ghz on it’s own at 5765 Mbps, which would give the Mudi 7 it’s E5800 model number.
Will the Mudi 7 be tested/compatible with Calyx Sprout tmobile SIMs like the Spitz AX and Puli? Asking on behalf of happy Calyx-Glinet customers who itemize their 1040s (Calyx is a 501c3 charity).
Calyx SIM/eSIM + Glinet Spitz AX + Omnicharge Omni20 (portable AC outlet for travel) = best internet ever!!!
does it support IMEI change? For me personally matter to have this option in countries like Turkey and Egypt don’t be blocked after 14 days. And how about blocking internet sharing by mobile operators, do mudi solve this restriction too?