Thanks for the low latency :)

> You can use 3G for communication to another device on 3G. You have
> only to know that the IP address on 3G is NAT'd. You have to make sure
> that you tell the other device how to deal with the NAT traversal. One
> way to solve this is having an external server which is able to
> translate the IP addresses correctly.

By "external server", do you mean a server that lies outside the 3G
network itself but is connected to it or a third-party server with
static IP inside the 3G network itself (intuitively I'd go for the
latter but I want to be sure).

Also regarding this NAT issue, does the provider actually break the
whole network into small cluster (like city-centric or something like
that) and NAT is used between those or is it located somewhere else ?
This question is more to see how NAT fits in the bigger picture.


Sy.
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