Chapter 9 - Configuring And Communicating With Your Device; Interacting With Your Device Overview; Before Using The Device; Using Command Mode And Online Data Mode - Multitech MT100UCC-C2 Developer's Manual

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Chapter 9 – Configuring and Communicating with
Your Device

Interacting with Your Device Overview

This section describes how to use AT commands to interact with your device. Using terminal software such as
Kermit, you can issue AT commands to communicate with and configure your modem. The AT commands let you
establish, read and modify device parameters and help you control how the device operates. This section
documents basic interactions with your device, such as verifying signal strength and network registrations, sending
and reading SMS text messages, and sending and receiving data.
Generally, USB modems are used as unintelligent bit pipes. In Windows, this means you create a dial-up network
connection that uses the Windows IP stack to use the modem to create a PPP connection to the cellular network.
The modem is assigned an IP address from the cellular carrier. This connection provides Internet access and is the
basis for TCP/IP communication for sending and receiving email, creating TCP/UDP Sockets, or putting and getting
files from an FTP server.
In Linux, PPPD is used to dial the modem and create the connection to the cellular TCP/IP network. This provides
Internet access for sending and receiving email, creating TCP/UDP Sockets, or putting and getting files from an FTP
server.

Before Using the Device

Before using the device:
Install any drivers. Refer to the separate driver installation guide for your device.
Power up your device and ensure it is connected to your computer that issues AT commands.
Install terminal software that can communicate with the device, such as HyperTerminal, Tera Term, Kermit,
or Putty.

Using Command Mode and Online Data Mode

Modems have two operation modes, command and online data. After power up, the modem is in command mode
and ready to accept AT commands.
Use AT commands to communicate with and configure your modem. These commands establish, read, and modify
device parameters and control how the modem works. The device also generates responses to AT commands that
help determine the modem's current state.
If the modem is in online data mode, it only accepts the Escape command (+++).
To send the modem AT Commands from terminal emulation software, set the software to match the modem's
default data format, which is:
Speed: 115,200 bps
Data bits: 8
Parity: none
Stop bit: 1
Flow control: hardware
QuickCarrier™ USB-E MT100UCC-C2 Developer Guide
CONFIGURING AND COMMUNICATING WITH YOUR DEVICE
25

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