- Cyber Security
How to Prepare Your Business for Cyber Essentials Plus Certification
3 Jun, 2026

£138.31 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £114.61 ex‑VAT, a Dell-branded internal WWAN card like the DW5933E can be good value *if* you specifically need built-in 4G/5G connectivity for a Dell laptop/convertible that supports it. The big win in the real world is convenience and consistency: one device, always-connected when you’re out of Wi‑Fi range, and usually less hassle than dongles or USB LTE solutions (especially for field techs, depots with spotty coverage, or anyone who lives on the move). If your company already manages Dell devices, it also tends to be a cleaner fit for standard fleet provisioning than random third-party hardware.
That said, I wouldn’t buy this just to “get internet anywhere.” You need to confirm the exact Dell model compatibility and that the WWAN antenna layout/WWAN enablement is already in place—otherwise you’ll end up paying for something that can be a pain to get working properly. Also factor in ongoing SIM/data costs and the fact that WWAN is only as good as the local mobile network where your staff actually operate; in some UK areas it’s fine, in others it’s frustratingly patchy. If you mainly work from offices or reliable Wi‑Fi sites, a proper Wi‑Fi upgrade or a vetted USB/LTE alternative will often be the better spend.

TP-Link
TP-Link UE330C V1 - Hub - USB-C, with Gigabit Ethernet - 3 x SuperSpeed USB 3.0 + 1 x 1000Base-T - desktop

Lenovo
Quectel EM061K-GL - Wireless cellular modem - 4G LTE Advanced - M.2 Card - for ThinkPad L13 2-in-1 Gen 6 21R8

TP-Link
TP-Link TX20UH V1 - Network adapter - USB 3.0 - 802.11ax

Epson
Epson ELPAP10 - Network adapter - 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n - for Epson EB-2040, 2055, 2140, 2155, 2165, 2250, 2265, 5520, 5530, 685, 695, L25000, EH-TW8300