Telular SX7HSDPA07 SX7 Fixed Wireless Terminal User Manual Users Manaual

Telular Corporation SX7 Fixed Wireless Terminal Users Manaual

User Manual

Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  1 of 25 r Telular Corporation   Requirements Document  SX7M / SX7T Fixed Wireless Modem / Terminal     5/16/2007  Part Number: TBD
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  2 of 25 rTable of Contents 1 INTRODUCTION................................................................................................................................ 5 2 PRODUCT VARIANTS....................................................................................................................... 5 2.1 CELLULAR VARIANTS..................................................................................................................... 5 2.2 SX7T VS. SX7M ............................................................................................................................. 5 2.3 WIFI................................................................................................................................................ 5 2.4 SKUS.............................................................................................................................................. 5 3 ENCLOSURE ....................................................................................................................................... 7 4 CONNECTORS.................................................................................................................................... 7 5 POWER SWITCH................................................................................................................................ 8 6 CONFIGURATION RESET SWITCH.............................................................................................. 9 7 EXTERNAL POWER SUPPLY ......................................................................................................... 9 8 BATTERY PACK AND BATTERY OPERATION........................................................................ 10 9 WAN REQUIREMENTS................................................................................................................... 10 9.1 INTERNET ACCESS OVER CELLULAR............................................................................................. 10 9.2 IP MANAGEMENT.......................................................................................................................... 10 9.3 REMOTE DEVICE MANAGEMENT (RDM) ...................................................................................... 12 10 LAN REQUIREMENTS................................................................................................................13 10.1 LAN - WIRED CONNECTIONS........................................................................................................ 13 10.2 LAN UTILITIES............................................................................................................................. 13 10.3 LOCAL DEVICE MANAGEMENT..................................................................................................... 14 10.4 WIFI 802.11B/G............................................................................................................................. 15 11 ETHERNET PORT........................................................................................................................ 15 12 GPS.................................................................................................................................................. 15 13 USB DEVICE PORT...................................................................................................................... 15 14 SIMULATED PSTN....................................................................................................................... 16 14.1 VOICE SERVICE............................................................................................................................. 16 14.2 ANALOG FAX (G3) SERVICE.......................................................................................................... 17 14.3 ANALOG MODEM SERVICE............................................................................................................ 17 14.4 RJ-11 JACK PROGRAMMABILITY AND MODES............................................................................... 17 14.5 POTS PROGRAMMING................................................................................................................... 19 15 IP MODEMS................................................................................................................................... 20 16 USB HOST...................................................................................................................................... 20 16.1 THE USB HOST PORT SHALL SUPPORT USB 2.0 – FULL SPEED (12 MBITS/SECOND) .................... 20 16.2 THE USB HOST PORT SHALL SUPPLY A NOMINAL 5 VOLTS AT 100 MILLIAMPS............................. 20 16.3 TARGETED USB DEVICES.............................................................................................................. 20
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  3 of 25 r17 LED INDICATORS ....................................................................................................................... 21 17.1 LED DEFINITIONS.......................................................................................................................... 21 17.2 PROGRAMMING MODE.................................................................................................................. 21 17.3 PSTN ERROR................................................................................................................................22 17.4 UN-PROVISIONED CDMA.............................................................................................................. 22 18 DEVICE MANAGEMENT AND CONFIGURATION .............................................................. 22 19 RUIM/USIM ................................................................................................................................... 22 20 SUPPORTING SOFTWARE ........................................................................................................ 23 20.1 END USER SOFTWARE................................................................................................................... 23 20.2 SUPPLY CHAIN SOFTWARE............................................................................................................ 24 21 SUPPORTING SERVICES........................................................................................................... 24 21.1 FAX GATEWAY SERVICE - FOIP (IWF)......................................................................................... 24 21.2 MOIP  IWF................................................................................................................................... 24 21.3 DDNS WEB SERVER..................................................................................................................... 24 22 ENVIRONMENTAL SPECIFICATIONS AND REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS .......... 25 22.1 REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS...................................................................................................... 25 22.2 ENVIRONMENTAL REQUIREMENTS................................................................................................ 25
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  4 of 25 rRevision History   Date Revision  Summary ECO By/Approved 11/27/2006 0.0 Created  --- Gerard Knight 12/03/2006  0.1  Bulk changes resulting from meeting with Marketing   Gerard Knight 12/06/2006  List of additions resulting from Meeting with Marketing:   Gerard Knight     User option for any voice call to suspend on ongoing packet data        “Copy protection” of billable software upgrades        Control of what users can and cannot download based on carrier (block of ESNs)        Added USB Host to supply 5 Volts @ 100mA         Added requirement for 12V Automotive power cable        Added Environmental requirements         Added RoHS requirement     12/08/2006 0.2 List of changes resulting from meeting with Marketing      Added UL listed, CSA, CE for external power supply     Replaced LED definitions with update from Josh H.         Added cellular variant for 1xEVD-O Rel 0         Added section depicting SKUs         Added new POTS cmds from Edward S.         Replaced CLI with M2M interface     12/22/06  0.3  Labeling changes 3.1.7 to 3.1.10 (Frank Collias)    Gerard Knight     Added Product Matrix from Josh Hughes         Updated Cellular Variants to not conflict with product Matrix        Added Setup Wizard section from Josh Hughes         Added FOIP and MOIP modem details from Josh Hughes        Added requirement to support Verizon Access Manager Program        Filled in several TBDs     3/8/2007    Updated RJ-11 Jack logic    Gerard Knight     Updated LED definitions (Bruce Urban)         Updated Product SKU table (Bruce Urban)       Various other changes    5/16/2007    Replaced SKU table with update from Darin H    Gerard Knight     Added Super G3 33.6K fax modem
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  5 of 25 r1 Introduction This document details the requirements for the Telular SX7T/M Series of Fixed Cellular Terminals. These families of products offer CSD, SMS, and Internet services over various broadband cellular technologies.   The requirements set forth here are subject to a staged release plan. The release plan contemplates 3 releases before all the requirements are met.  2 Product Variants 2.1 Cellular Variants 2.1.1 HSDPA The SX7T HSDPA products shall use the Sierra Wireless MC8775V Radio Module which has the following features. a) HSDPA/UMTS frequency bands (850, 1900, 2100 MHz) b) EDGE/GPRS/GSM bands (850, 900, 1800, and 1900 MHz) c) HR/FR/EFR/AMR Vocoders 2.1.2  1xEVD0 Rev A The SX7T 1xEVDO Rev A products shall use the Sierra Wireless MC5725V Radio Module which has the following features. a) 1xEVDO Rev. A service b) Dual-Band 800/1900 MHz c) EVRC and 13KQCELP Vocoders d) GPS 2.2  SX7T vs. SX7M 2.2.1  The SX7M and SX7T shall both support Ethernet, USB device and USB host interfaces. 2.2.2  The SX7T shall support a simulated PSTN port, supporting POTS phones, analog modems, analog fax machines, caller ID boxes, and telephone answering machines. 2.3 WiFi 2.3.1  The WiFi product variants shall provide 802.11b/g Access Point (AP) LAN functionality for internet access over the cellular WAN.  2.4 SKUs The table below shows the SKUs known at this time, along with their key attributes, customer applications, and target regions.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  6 of 25 r        Product     Base Model Numbers Key Attribute  Customer CDMA V/D/F      SX7T-605C  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Generic-US SX7T-615C  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Sprint SX7T-625C  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Alltel SX7T-635C  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Verizon Wireless SX7T-645C  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Telus Mobility SX7M-400C  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Generic SX7M-415C  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Sprint SX7M-425C  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Alltel SX7M-435C  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Verizon Wireless SX7M-445C  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Telus Mobility GSM V/D/F      SX7T-605G  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Generic EU SX7T-605G  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Generic UK SX7T-605G  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Generic AU SX7T-605G  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Generic US SX7T-655G  Voice/SMS/Hi-Speed Data/Fax/GPS  Cingular SX7M-400G  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Generic SX7M-455G  HiSpeed Data Modem Only  Cingular
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  7 of 25 r3 Enclosure 3.1.1  The enclosure shall be smaller in size than the current SX5T, 5”x6”x1” 3.1.2  The enclosure shall be made of CE-rated plastic 3.1.3  The enclosure shall be shall be Pantone (TBD) (“Dell Black”) in color, with a Telular logo. 3.1.4  The enclosure shall have mounting holes to allow for wall mounting 3.1.5  The enclosure shall provide end user SIM/RUIM access 3.1.6  The enclosure shall allow for end user battery pack access 3.1.7  All labeling shall be screen printed. Ink color shall be white. 3.1.8  LEDs shall be labeled both on the top and on the side of the top cover, below LEDs, to facilitate easy viewing in either a single or stacked installation.  3.1.9  Each connector on the back side shall be labeled.  3.1.10  Standard size Telular logo shall be located on the top cover at the top left corner. A smaller Telular logo shall be located on the front side at the lower right corner   4 Connectors The following connectors shall be included:
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  8 of 25 r4.1.1   An RJ-45 connector with a yellow ring shall be provided for the Ethernet Port 4.1.2  A USB Type B connector with a purple ring shall be provided for the USB Device port. 4.1.3  A USB Type A connector shall be provided for the USB Host port. 4.1.4  One or two TNC Antenna connectors shall be provided depending on whether the radio uses antenna diversity or not. 4.1.5  A Standard 12 VDC barrel connector shall be used for power entry.  4.1.6  A user detachable battery connector shall be provided. 4.1.7  A green grounding screw shall be provided. 4.1.8  The option for a RUIM/USIM socket shall be provided. (GSM or RUIM variants only) 4.1.9  Two RJ-11 Jacks shall be provided for the Simulated PSTN function. (SX7T family only) 5 Power Switch There shall be a slide power switch capable of turning the unit on or off. The following table defines the operation of the power switch.    Switch  AC Valid  Battery Valid    State of Operation On  Y  X  Normal Operation on AC, Charging if required On  N  Y  Normal Operation on battery On N  N  Totally off Off  Y  X  Charging Only, if required Off N  X  Totally off
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  9 of 25 r6 Configuration Reset Switch 6.1.1  A push button switch is required to restore the local default settings for Ethernet/USB connectivity. This is required because the unit could be configured such that it could no longer be locally accessed.  6.1.2  This reset function shall reset the password for local device management. 6.1.3  The local defaults will only be restored for a switch depression of 10 seconds or greater. 7 External Power Supply 7.1.1  The power supply shall be a desktop type  7.1.2  The power supply shall operate over 90-264 VAC input 7.1.3  The power supply shall have a 12 VDC output 7.1.4  The power supply shall have a 3 wire detachable IEC input power cord 7.1.5  The power supply shall be UL listed, CSA, and CE approved An automotive power cord for 12VDC operation shall be provided. Connector shall accommodate both U.S. and European connector configuration standards.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  10 of 25 r 8  Battery Pack and Battery Operation 8.1.1  All units will be shipped with a NiMH battery pack. 8.1.2  End users are required to operate units with a battery pack installed. This insures detachment from the network during AC failures, and provides extra protection of non-volatile memory in harsh power grid environments. 8.1.3  The unit shall operate without a battery pack installed because manufacturing builds and tests units without a battery installed. 8.1.4  The battery shall provide 8 hours standby time 8.1.5  The battery shall provide 1 hour talk time 8.1.6  A discharged battery shall take less than 4 hours to charge to 90% of capacity. 8.1.7  When in an “off” state and no external DC voltage supplied, total battery drain shall be less than 100 uA. 9 WAN Requirements 9.1  Internet Access over Cellular 9.1.1  The WAN interface shall provide Internet access over cellular 9.2 IP Management 9.2.1 DDNS Client A DDNS (Dynamic Domain Name Server) client works with a DDNS server to allow mobile terminated access to a terminal despite it possibly having an unknown dynamic IP address. The DDNS server enables access to SX7s via the Internet using a programmable symbolic name, rather than an IP address.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  11 of 25 r9.2.1.1 A DDNS client shall be provided. 9.2.1.2 The DDNS client shall support the Mint DDNS standard. 9.2.1.3 The DDNS client shall be interoperable with Telular’s, and commercially available DDNS servers. 9.2.2 Auto Connect 9.2.2.1 A mode for automatically connecting to the Internet upon power-on, loss of connection, or after termination of a circuit switched call, shall be provided. 9.2.2.2 A mode for automatically connecting to the Internet on LAN activity shall be provided. 9.2.2.3 The auto connect mechanism shall be user programmable to select mode and enable or disable. 9.2.3  Internet Connection Keep Alive Prevents the closing of the Internet connection by the cellular network during extended periods with no data being transferred. 9.2.3.1 Keep Alive may use Ping to keep the Internet connection open. 9.2.3.2 Keep Alive shall be user configurable to enable and disable 9.2.3.3 The duration of inactivity before a Keep Alive action is taken shall be user configurable. 9.2.4  SMS Triggered Connect-Back (“Phone-Home”) This method can be used by a remote entity to establish a connection with an SX7 terminal that has an unknown IP address, and/or is behind a firewall. The remote entity will send a secure SMS to the terminal. The terminal will respond by initiating a connection to the remote entity.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  12 of 25 r9.2.4.1 SMS Triggered Connect-Back shall be provided 9.3  Remote Device Management (RDM) 9.3.1  RDM shall be done Over-The-Air (OTA) 9.3.2 RDM Security 9.3.2.1 Unauthorized access to the terminal maintenance and configuration shall be prohibited using authentication and encryption. 9.3.2.2 Provisions for RDM access by customers to said customer’s terminals shall be provided. 9.3.2.3 In such cases where customers are given access rights to their terminals, access by Telular shall be revocable. 9.3.3  All configuration settings shall be remotely readable and writable 9.3.4  FOTA (Firmware Over The Air) 9.3.4.1 Application Processor Firmware 9.3.4.1.1 The Application Processor Firmware shall be upgradeable in segments to minimize cost of data transmission 9.3.4.1.2 The following application firmware segments shall be individually upgradeable:  a) Sticky Points (code patches) b) Arbitrary Files in the File System c) PSTN Simulator DSP code  d) RTPs e) Downloadable Kernel Modules (DKM) f) Shared Libraries g) VxWorks OS 9.3.4.2 Radio Module Firmware 9.3.4.2.1 The radio module software shall be upgradeable.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  13 of 25 r9.3.5 Sensor Points 9.3.5.1 Wind River Sensor Point remote diagnostic technology shall be supported 10  LAN Requirements 10.1  LAN - Wired Connections 10.1.1 Ethernet 10.1.1.1 The LAN shall provide Internet connectivity via the Ethernet port. 10.1.1.2 The Ethernet port shall support connection to an external hub or switch. 10.1.1.3 There shall be a version of product with a built in two or four Port Ethernet switch. 10.1.2 USB 10.1.2.1 The LAN shall provide Internet connectivity via the USB Device port 10.1.2.2 The USB device port shall support DUN (dial-up networking). 10.2 LAN Utilities 10.2.1 DHCP Server 10.2.1.1 A DHCP server shall be provided for automatic assignment of IP addresses of any device connected to the LAN.  10.2.1.2 The DHCP server shall be user configurable to on or off.  Default shall be on. 10.2.1.3 Local IP addresses shall also be statically configurable. 10.2.2 NAPT 10.2.2.1 A Network Address Port Translation function shall be provided for sharing the single WAN IP address amongst multiple local IP addresses on the LAN. 10.2.3 Firewall 10.2.3.1 A firewall function shall be provided. 10.2.4  ATE Support shall be provided as required (Automatic Test Equipment)
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  14 of 25 r10.2.5 SMS Services 10.2.5.1 SMS POP3 Adaptation: needs more definition 10.3  Local Device Management 10.3.1  Local device management shall be done using the Ethernet port 10.3.2 Internal Website An internal website for maintenance and configuration shall be provided. This website is accessible over the LAN. The following sections describe the website’s capabilities. 10.3.2.1 System Settings • Password Change • Host Name Change • Restore Factory Defaults  Factory defaults(hidden)/ Carrier defaults • System Reset • Software Upgrade (Pull) 10.3.2.2 WAN Configuration • PPP Setup • Physical Address Setting • GPS Reporting Configuration 10.3.2.3 LAN Configuration • IP Address /Subnet Address Setting • DHCP Setup • GPS Applications Configuration 10.3.2.4 Firewall Configuration 10.3.2.5 Simulated PSTN Configuration The following list of PSTN configuration items shall be manageable using the internal web site:
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  15 of 25 r10.3.3 M2M Interface 10.3.3.1 An interface suitable for M2M shall be provided for reading and writing of all device configuration items 10.3.3.2 The M2M interface shall be password protected 10.3.3.3 The M2M interface shall be protected from hacking over the WAN 10.4 WiFi 802.11b/g 10.4.1  The WiFi product variants shall provide 802.11b/g Access Point (AP) LAN functionality for internet access over the cellular WAN. 11  Ethernet Port 11.1.1  The Ethernet port shall be 10/100 Base T with auto detect. 11.1.2  The Ethernet port shall support Local Device Management 12  GPS  12.1.1  Units shall be configurable to report GPS location over the WAN or LAN in response to the following triggers: a) Time Interval b) Change Magnitude c) Remote query d) Local query 12.1.2  Mobility restriction shall be supported 13 USB Device Port 13.1.1  The USB Device Port shall support USB 2.0 – Full Speed (12 Mbits/second) 13.1.2  The USB Device Port shall provide Internet access over cellular using DUN (Dial-Up Networking) In general terms, the USB device supports PPP over USB for Internet access.  DUN, Dial UP Networking, is a specific term for PPP over USB on a PC running Windows.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  16 of 25 r13.1.3  The USB Device Port shall support PC Fax 13.1.4  The USB Device Port shall support PC CSD 14  Simulated PSTN  14.1 Voice Service 14.1.1  Voice service shall be supported on the Simulated PSTN 14.1.2  Voice service shall be supported during an active data session on the WAN, when simultaneous voice and data is supported by the radio and the serving network. 14.1.3  Dialing an emergency number shall terminate or suspend any existing network connection as required to make an emergency call. 14.1.4  User option for any voice call to suspend on ongoing packet data (voice priority). 14.1.5  POTS programming will function within voice service 14.1.6  TTY/TDD shall be supported during voice service 14.1.7  Type 1 (On Hook) Caller ID shall be supported during Voice Service. 14.1.8  Type 2 (Off Hook) Caller ID shall be supported during Voice Service. 14.1.9  A set of vertical services  (i.e. *69, *70 etc.) shall be supported. The set is defined by the least common denominator of services that can be reasonably supported in CDMA and GSM systems. (TBD) 14.1.10  The glare behavior shall be user selectable to reject an incoming call during dialing, or to provide a call waiting tone during dialing. 14.1.11  The GSM Standard MMI shall not be supported. 14.1.12  Support of Supplementary Services and USSD  14.1.13  DTMF correction shall be supported Correction for distortion of down link DTMF by Vocoder. Purpose is to ensure reliable operation with premises equipment (PBX, telemetry equipment). If necessary, can add programmability for user to select ON/OFF of dtmf compensation mode, or adjustment of sensitivity.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  17 of 25 r14.2  Analog Fax (G3) Service 14.2.1  Analog Fax over CSD Bearer Analog fax shall be supported over a CSD bearer only when the serving network supports it. 14.2.2  Analog Fax over TCP/IP Bearer – FOIP FOIP shall be supported using the T.38 Protocol 14.2.3  G3 Modems Supported • ITU V.17 - 7200, 9600, 12,000 and 14,400 bps • ITU V.29 - 7200 and 9600 bps  • ITU V.27ter - 2400 and 4800 bps • ITU V.21 Channel 2 - 300 bps FSK • ITU T.30 Fax Protocol  • ITU T.4, MH and MR Image Format Conversion • ITU T.4 Copy Quality Checking/CorrectionSuper G3 Modem 33.6KBPS 14.3  Analog Modem Service 14.3.1  The following analog modems shall be supported: a) ITU V.34 - 2400 to 33,600 bps  b) ITU V.32/V.32bis - 4800 to 14,400 bps  c) ITU V.23 - 75/1200 bps d) Bell 202 - 75/1200 bps e) ITU V.22bis - 1200 and 2400 bps  f) ITU V.22 - 1200 bps g) Bell 212 - 1200 bps h) Compatible with 212A? (TBD) i) ITU V.21 - 300 bps j) Bell 103 - 300 bps k) ITU V.42 - LAPM Error Correction, Detection l) ITU V.42bis - Lempel-Ziv Data Compression m) V.90 Server Modem (56K) 14.3.2  The analog modem shall be able to negotiate from 33.6K and higher down to lower speeds? (TBD) 14.3.3  The analog modem shall support V.8? 14.4  RJ-11 Jack Programmability and Modes In this section the RJ11 Jacks are referred to as J1 and J2.  These jacks can be user configured using the local device management to support voice and data capabilities without the need for prefix dialing or POTS commands.  Normally, the two RJ11 jacks in the SX7t operate as extension jacks; if both jacks are off hook, they will both have the same signal on tip/ring.  There are two modes of operation for the RJ11 jacks, Voice Only Mod (VOM) and Voice and Analog Mode (VAMM).  These modes are configurable by POTS commands and/or the configuration web page.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  18 of 25 r 14.4.1  Voice Only Mode (VOM)  This operating mode sets both jacks to handle only voice calls by default.  This operating mode can be overridden on either jack by using a dialing prefix. The dialing prefix in this mode indicates to the system that a fax/data call is to be launched on the jack that is issuing the dialing prefix.  The dialing prefix override is for the next call only.  After the call terminates, the default VOM operation returns.  14.4.2  Voice and Analog Modem Mode (VAMM)  This operating mode sets jack 1 (J1 to be the voice jack and jack 2 (J2) to be the fax/data jack.  Like VOM, this mode’s operation can be overridden by using a dialing prefix.  If J1 has a dialing prefix pre-pended to the dial string, a fax/data call will be launched.  If J2 has a dialing prefix pre-pended to the dial string, a voice call will be launched. The dialing prefix overrides are for the next call only.  After the call terminates, the default VAMM operation returns.   14.4.3 MO Call Routing The following table assumes that the system is idle before either of the jacks seize the line, i.e.  no calls are active, and the cellular service allows simultaneous voice and data calling.  J1 J2 Mode Tone Comments On On X     Off  On  VOM  Dial Tone  Launch voice call On  Off  VOM  Dial tone  Launch voice call Off  On  VAMM  Dial tone  Launch voice call On  Off  VAMM  Dial tone  Launch fax/data call On On X     Override  On  VOM  Dial tone  Launch fax/data call On  Override  VOM  Dial tone  Launch fax/data call Override  On  VAMM  Dial tone  Launch fax/data call On  Override  VAMM  Dial tone  Launch voice call   Override = Dialing prefix to override the current jack mode.  14.4.4  MT Call Routing Mobile terminated calls are also affected by jack mode setting.  Mode Fax/data Voice Comments VAMM J2 J1 Fax/data on J2. Only J2 will receive alert signal by disabling J1. J1 will be re-enabled after line J2 line seizure or alert end.  Voice on J1.  J2 will be disabled during an MT voice call alert so only J1 will ring.  J2 reenabled after J1 line seizure or alert end. VOM  X  J1 & J2  Fax/data MT calls are rejected.  Voice calls are rung through.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  19 of 25 r   14.4.5  Voice Channel Access Rules via Voice Priority  This section describes the system Voice Priority setting.  The SX7t can be set so that voice calls take priority over any other connection activity in the system.  This applies only to mobile originated calls.  Voice Priority  WAN connected  Dial tone  Comments Enabled (default)  X  Normal  Pause WAN if necessary (EVDO).  Disabled  Yes  E911  E911 call will be launched.  System will halt any connectivity activity necessary to accomplish this Disabled No Normal Voice calls launched as normal.    14.4.6 Limitations  Due to hardware limitations, there is an RJ11 jack priority built into the system.  The priority is to J2 in the system.  For J1 to be able to detect off hook or on hook, J2 must already be on hook.  In other words, for any jack activity to be detected on J1 (on hook, off hook or hook flash), J2 must be idle (on hook).  If J2 goes off hook, any changes in J1 hook state cannot be detected by S/W.    14.4.7 Prefix Dialing 14.4.7.1 Prefix Dialing shall be provided to override the current mode of an off-hook RJ-11 jack. 14.4.7.2 There shall be user programmable prefixes that allow numeric and non-numeric entries. 14.4.7.3 User programmable dialing prefixes shall not invalidate the standard prefixes. 14.4.7.4 Prefix dialing shall apply to voice and data modes 14.5 POTS Programming POTS programming uses a Plain Old Telephone Set to program internal settings by dialing special sequences. 14.5.1  POTS Programming shall support the following: a) Entering programming/configuration mode b) Activating CDMAs units by manual entry of MDN/MIN mobile numbers c) Setting independent functions (voice, fax, CSD, FoIP/MoIP) of  RJ-11 jacks d) Pre-fix dialing (#*1#, #*2#, ext) for fax and CSD functions, one time and always modes e) Reset user defaults (ex:#*107*1#) f) Setting USB for CSD? g) Setting USB or RJ-45 for packet data? h) Properties (username and password) for “Always On” packet data?
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  20 of 25 ri) ROH Continuous/Non-Continuous j) Automatic End-Of-Dialing k) Polarity Reversal – MO l) Polarity Reversal – MT m) Self-Test Interval n) Dial Tone Type o) Restore User Settings to PRI Values p) On-Hook Voltage Level q) Disconnect Tone 15  IP Modems   These “modems” work in conjunction with the analog modems as defined in the Simulated PSTN section. IP modems packetize data from the analog modem and transmit the packets over the Internet. Likewise, IP modems de-packetize data from the Internet and transmit the data to the analog modem.  For communicating with remote analog modems, IP modems will require some form of an IWF to translate IP back to analog. In some cases the far end might be satisfied with IP data, and no IWF would be needed. With an SX7T at the far end, analog to analog communication could be supported without an IWF.   The following types of IP modems shall be supported. •  FOIP - Analog Fax over IP / Telular or 3rd Party Fax Gateway (IWF) •  MOIP - Analog Modem Over IP / Telular IWF •  FOIP - Analog Fax over IP / Point to Point •  MOIP - Analog Modem Over IP / Point to Point 16  USB Host  16.1  The USB Host Port shall support USB 2.0 – Full Speed (12 Mbits/second) 16.2  The USB Host Port shall supply a nominal 5 Volts at 100 milliamps 16.3  Targeted USB devices For revenue protection, the ability to push new device drivers OTA would obviate the need for support and management of user licenses. The following devices may be supported: a) WiFi b) Bluetooth c)  IP Video Camera d) Hard Disk Drive e)  USB Memory Stick
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  21 of 25 r17  LED Indicators  17.1 LED definitions LED 12 3 4 567PowerMSG PSTN Service / SIM  RSSI RSSI RSSIOff No Msgs On Hook - No Wan No GPS,SigSolid AC/Normal VM / POTS On hk / Wan Service / 2G 1 Bar + GPS 2 bars 3 barsSlow DC only SMS / Flash Service / 2.5G 1 Bar 1 bar 2 barFastBoth / FOTAOn Hk / Wan Tx Service / 3GSolid AC/chrgNorm / Prog modeOff hk / Wan Roam Srvc / 2GSlow Low DC Off hk / No Wan Roam Srvc / 2.5GFast Off Hk / Wan Tx Roam Srvc / 3G Off Off Off noneSolid Batt fault ROH / Wan  No Service On Off Off LowestSlow DC crit ROH / No Wan PIN Locked On Slow Off PoorFast ROH / Wan TxSimErr/NoSim/NetReject On On Off FairOn On Slow GoodProgramming Mode Unprovisioned CDMA On On On BestAlternateRed/Grn Fast RedPSTN ErrorSolid PSTN Err / Wan Slow PSTN Err / No WanFast PSTN Err / Wan TxROH will be cleared by going on hook. PSTN error will no 17.2 Programming Mode 17.2.1  LED number 3 shall alternate between Red and green in the programming mode. 17.2.2  LED number 2 shall indicate the type of programming mode.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  22 of 25 r17.3 PSTN Error 17.3.1  Indicated by LED number 3 being red and it shall not clear by placing receiver on hook. 17.3.1.1 Solid = PSTN Error/WAN 17.3.1.2  Slow = PSTN Error/ No Wan 17.3.1.3 Fast = PSTN Error/ Wan TX  17.4 Un-provisioned CDMA Indicated by fast flashing red LED number 4.   18  Device Management and Configuration 18.1.1  Local device management and configuration shall be supported. See Local Device Management in LAN section and POTS Programming in the Simulated PSTN section 18.1.2  The device shall support remote management and configuration See Remote Device Management in WAN section 19  RUIM/USIM 19.1.1  3V/1.8V RUIM/USIMs shall be supported Need to check what Mfg/Sizes/types are supported (TBD)
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  23 of 25 r20  Supporting Software 20.1 End User Software 20.1.1  Standard Web Browser Define web browsers tested with (Iexp, Mozzilla) 20.1.2  USB Driver Installation Wizard  20.1.3 Full Setup Wizard 20.1.4  Firmware Upgrader. Revenue protection (send enable software key) media alone does not work 20.1.5  SMS POP3 Adapter and Install Wizard 20.1.6  Carrier Specific Software 20.1.6.1 Verizon Access Manager Program shall be supported 20.1.7  “Copy protection” of billable software upgrades 20.1.8  Control of what users can and cannot download based on carrier (block of ESNs) Are there special connection managers, utilities, etc. required by each targeted carrier? 20.1.9  SX7 User Setup/Installation Wizard on CD The purpose for the user “Setup Wizard” would be to allow a software interface between an End User computer and the SX7 to initially configure everything from the mobile number (CDMA), RJ-11 functionality, USB, and internet packet data.  Therefore, replacing the need for POTS programming or prefix dialing.  This would be an exe file on a CD or internet download compatible with Windows 2000 and higher.  It should also allow a “configuration” file (user defaults) to be saved to facility setting up multiple units (minus the mobile number).   Should follow the process of asking questions relevant to the Model selected by the End User, boxes being “checked” or “filled out” before allowing the user to select “next page”.  A review page will be shown at the end to confirm settings before saving to NV memory.  Action Items to be completed by the Wizard: •  MDN & MIN for CDMA •  J1 & J2 functionality (voice, CSD, MoIP/FoIP) that will detect MO/MT calls and handles them appropriately as stated in the product spec. •  Internet packet data
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  24 of 25 ro  Set up dialup session with Windows and SX7, username/password/dialing number o  Select USB B Host, local PC o  Select Ethernet, local PC or LAN o  “Always ON” connectivity •  CSD modem settings (baud rate, timing, ect.) for Telemetry applications •  Advance feature settings, ex: DTMF correction ON or OFF •  Possible future USB Host & Device driver installation •  Possible future functionality for setting up Bluetooth connectivity o  Cellular handset to SX7T RJ-11 jack output for premise POTS phones o  Handsfree kits for voice calls o  Device to SX7 T for CSD transmission o  Device to SX7T for Packet Data transmission 20.2 Supply Chain Software 20.2.1 First Flasher 20.2.2 Re-Flasher 20.2.3 Diagnostics 20.2.4  PST   21  Supporting Services 21.1  Fax Gateway Service - FOIP (IWF) This is an Internet service for converting between FOIP data and analog fax signals on the PSTN. Users can use this service to send analog faxes between an SX7T and any analog fax machine on the real PSTN, without the need for 2G network fax service.  21.1.1  Telular shall provide a fax gateway service. 21.2 MOIP  IWF This is an Internet service for converting between MOIP data and analog modem signals on the PSTN. Users can use this service to send analog modem data between an SX7T and any supported analog modem on the real PSTN, without the need for 2G network fax services.  21.2.1  Telular shall provide a MOIP IWF service. 21.3  DDNS Web Server See WAN requirements section for detail on DDNS.
Copyright © 2007 by Telular Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.  Printed in the United States of America.  No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written consent of Telular Corporation.  25 of 25 r21.3.1  A DDNS Web Server shall be provided by Telular. 22  Environmental Specifications and Regulatory Requirements 22.1 Regulatory Requirements 22.1.1  All Product Variants 22.1.1.1 FCC Part 15 certification is required 22.1.1.2 FCC Part 22/24 certification is required 22.1.1.3 RoHS Compliance is required 22.1.2  SX7T-605G (HSDPA)   The following approvals are required for all HSDPA product versions only: 22.1.2.1 PTCRB 22.1.2.2 Cingular Wireless Network Approval 22.1.2.3 CE 22.1.3 SX7T-605C EVDO)  The following approvals are required for all EVDO product versions only: 22.1.3.1 CTIA 22.1.3.2 Verizon Wireless Network approval 22.2 Environmental Requirements 22.2.1  Operating Temperature  −10º C (14º F) to +50º C (122º F) 22.2.2  Up to 95% relative humidity (non-condensing) 22.2.3 Storage Temperature −40º C (-40º F) to +60º C (140º F) 22.2.4  Up to 95% relative humidity (non-condensing)

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