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Hi, I'm going to attempt to answer your question, but there is missing information.
Different Countries use different frequencies and bands and some may not be available in your country.
However 1G,2G, 3G use a single frequency. The fourth generation mobile network 4G is superior because
it transmits and receives on multiple frequencies simulataneously. If you have intereference on one band or
frequency the others will generally get through.
For example, here in the UK, 3G was very poor but 4G is superb and reaches many places in your house
and even one level underground in some car parks, were 3G did not work.
So I would go for OrangePi 4G IoT
The specification of the Orange Pi 4G
http://www.orangepi.org/Orange%20Pi%204G-IOT/
Below are the bands that the Pi 4G can use:
GSM: 900/1800 (850/1900 optional)
WCDMA: B1/B8 (B2/B4/B5 optional)
TD-CDMA
CDMA2000
FDD-LTE: B1/B3/B7/B20 (B2/B4/B17optional)
TDD-LTE: B38/40/41B
What you need to check is what frequency bands are available in your Country and location, to help you
here is a starting link:
http://www.4g-lte.net/about/lte-frequency-bands/
The download and upload speed on 4G varies with the signal, for example in open space
and near a window I get 90Mbps download and 30Mbps upload. In a kitchen between
a cooker and fridge (full metal objects) I get 30Mbps downstream and about 15Mbps
upstream. This is still superior to home wifi and other signals apart from 5G.
As the Orange Pi 4G uses DDR3 memory the limiting factor is likely to be the speed of the
SD card, so use the highest class of card possible.
Depending on your application full HD 1920x1080p resolution uses only 3Mbps to download or upload.
If youre adding a sound layer, subtitle layer and audio desciption this uses around 4Mbps, so well witin
device capabilities proving that the 4G signal is good.
Again you did not say what you are streaming but most streams are compresses which is why they can use
lower bandwidths.
Hope that helps
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