In the late 2000s and early 2010s, mobile broadband was dominated by USB "dongles"—small, often plastic devices that promised internet connectivity on the go. Among these, the ZTE MF180 was a ubiquitous player, found in the hands of laptop users from Nairobi to New York. However, gaining access to its 3G or HSPA network was rarely a simple "plug-and-play" affair. The installation of its driver was a necessary, often frustrating, yet educational rite of passage that highlighted the technological transition from physical media to dynamic software and the persistent tension between hardware, operating systems, and end-user expertise.
APN settings are missing or incorrect.
This is normal. The MF180 driver installs multiple virtual COM ports. A restart finalizes the installation of the serial-to-USB controller. zte mf180 driver install