Get the GL.inet routers on amazon, they're like 20-30 bucks and simple to set up and literally designed to get around captive portals. Plus they have built in VPN, tethering, range extender, etc.
I have this one:
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
If you want to be extremely frustrated, follow the other advice about calling the front desk and getting your MAC address approved.
Got you solved mate.
Get one of THESE.
They're a pre-configured VPN router. If you're technically versed they wont be a problem for you to set it up with your VPN connection.
You can use it in a bridge mode where it will pull the internet signal from your router over ethernet, apply a VPN to it, and broadcast a second wifi network. That network will be from the USA.
You can also configure the device to pull in the current Canada wifi signal, apply the VPN to it and send out the VPN'd signal down an ethernet cable straight to the 360.
In regards to the VPN, go for a NORD Dedicated VPN from the states.
You don't need a new Netflix subscription.
bemeve sahibi bile degilim, halk arabasi kullaniyorum ama onu bile alamam. pc alinabilir ama o kadar para vermeyi hala sindiremiyorum.
aslinda cinliler ve gelisen teknoloji sayesinde top notch urunler almadan da yasayip gidiyorduk ama yeni vergiler sayesinde f/p denilen seyler bile kazik gibi olmaya basladi. pc isinde de nanometrik olarak gidilecek yol pek kalmadigindan oyle cok buyuk degisimler olmuyor da idare edebiliyoruz.
gecen gun ihtiyacim oldugu icin bosta duran raspberry pi zero'ya openwrt kurdum. geyik olsun diye raspi sub'ina attim kimse anlam veremedi. adam diyo ki 20 dolarlik bi mini router varken ayni parayi harciyorsun. dedigi router su an turkiye'de 500tl eger aliexpress'ten alirsan vergiydi ottu boktu ne olacagi belli degil. 20 dolar bize cok demeye utandim valla ne diyim.
Probably the best bet would be to find a tiny travel router that runs DD-WRT/OpenWRT and put that in between the internet and the iDRAC. Something like this would be a possibility. Then connect to it with a VPN tunnel before connecting to your iDRAC.
Try this. I've used one of these to connect a remote camera on wifi after the wifi in the camera went bad. I connected to this with a short ethernet, then connected this device to my wifi and it worked perfectly.
I use a mini router connected to the internet through either my phones hotspot, hotel internet, or whatever is the fastest. That creates a relatively private local network in which you can cast without having to do anything out of the ordinary like guest mode. Works fine with Plex, Netflix or whatever else I've tested. It's basically just setting up a home network wherever you happen to be. I use something like this: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_i_N9SGC1R7TGSPSYZ2GVFR
I just got a linkzone 2 and needed to hook it up to my routers ethernet port. I purchased this for $20 on amazon https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W
It's the GL.İNET GL-MT30ON-V2
I got a USB-C to USB-A cable and I hooked it in this order:
Linkzone 2 --> USB-C -- USB-A --> GL.iNET --> Network Cable --> Router WAN port
I also logged into the GL.iNET router and turned off the wifi since I didn't need it.
Hope that helps!
> Is it possible to wirelessly tether the Franklin T9 to a regular router (currently have an Archer A7)? I've searched online but haven't found a definitive answer for this.
Most routers don't support this. A common solution is something like this running as a Wifi client of the T9, then connecting via Ethernet to the WAN port on your router.
You can, and as others have stated, it can be a hassle to connect to hotel wifi. If you plan to do it more than once, I would invest in a travel hotspot (like this one) and configure your echo (and perhaps chromecast or fire) to connect to it. Hotel wifis also prevent devices talking to each other (which is good) but if you want to chromecast, it won't work. I have one of these, and when I travel, it all just works. Just have to get the travel router to auth with the hotel wifi which is easy.
the last time I played with win10 hotspot, it didn't allow enough control to setup what you want. In order to get win10 to use my usb dongle as a hotspot I had to turn off the internal one in my PC.
I would suggest getting something like this: https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
allows you to bridge the wifi and convert it into ethernet.
Also handy to have if you have a laptop and travel, isolates your laptop from whatever open wifi you connect to.
AFAIK no. But many routers let you connect your phone and use it as your internet connection. Even if your router does not allow it natively their are other ways to connect it. I use an inexpensive small travel router (GL.iNet Travel Router) and connect my iPhone to it via USB and then connect it's ethernet port to the WAN port on my router for an internet connection on the rare times when my ISP goes out.
> Visible has unlimited hotspot but it's limited to 5Mbps.
When i tried visible for a month to get me by while waiting on tmhi i was easily able to bypass the 5mb limit with a router.
If my area wasn't so heavily congested for verizon it would have been a great alternative to tmhi, at the very least that little router is more capable and customizable than the tmobile one.
A friend of mine who works in UK OPSEC recommends this for when you’re on the go as an easy solution.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Converter-Pre-installed-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
I’d be curious to know if anyone here doesn’t agree but to me that’s a good starting point.
To be honest, I didn't dig into it much further after hitting a bit of a wall..
Instead, I just bought a portable hotspot: https://www.amazon.ca/GL-MT300N-V2-Converter-Pre-Installed-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_7?keywords=Portable+WiFi+Hotspot&qid=1657568997&sr=8-7
You can get even cheaper ones than this, but for me, ultimately my time was worth more than 40$...
I was going to use my phone as a hotspot but for some reason when the iPad and Deck were both connected to the phone, they still couldn't see each other..
For the most part you should be using a travel router for that. They hook up to the hotel network and provide a private wifi network for you to connect to. This makes it easy to use devices like Chromecasts anywhere as the network is always the same and you're already paired to it. It also allows you to communicate back and forth with your own devices.
Here is an inexpensive example. They get more expensive with more features, faster speeds, more ports, etc.
It won't work without your own hotspot/bridge. I bought one of these and it goes on every trip with me for just this purpose.
From an IT perspective
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_i_N2XH6PN8M92473CMDVP3
Buy something like this, you need to connect to a vpn router without the use of software on your work machine
I'd use a vpn like NordVPN as a backup to a home router vpn
I'd say your pretty sound from there out given your background does not change frequently on video calls
Is it something like this? That looks pretty cool I will probably get one of those anyways as I like setting up networks and stuff. Can you have different profiles and everything to automatically connect to different networks and such. What is the real world max speed? Thanks for the suggestion.
If you don't feel like messing around with configuring a Raspberry Pi, you can use a mini-router with USB like the one I use: GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router
SMB share is automatically started (on the router) when you plug in a USB storage device. And it's cheaper, too.
So your VPN runs at startup, prompts you for creds, and then you can access company resources and generic stuff like Google.
You require a travel router. That mini one you bought may or may not work, feel free to link it so we can evaluate it. If it's no good, this router is a common one for stealth setups.
You will then require a VPN tunnel set up, with one endpoint in your "expected" area, and the other end on your travel router. OpenVPN will work for this. You will connect to this router via ethernet cable, you will turn your Wifi off. Time zone and language settings sometimes automatically update so you'll need to verify those are set to your expected area. Make sure the VPN killswitch is on.
The overall setup looks like this- your work VPN tunnel is passed through the tunnel you build, so that your job sees the incoming traffic as coming from the endpoint you built. Connecting via cable means they can't detect your location by availablle SSIDs. Killswitch enabling will break your connection to everything if the VPN fails.
What are you doing in the meantime? If those policies changed recently, your employer likely already can see where you are... the issue being do they care to check the logs, or will they configure alerts/geoblocking later on.
Use a device to take the public wifi and convert it to your own private wifi. At least then YOUR devices are protected. Your traffic outbound wont be protected without a VPN but you wont see people associating to your devices. An example which I use when traveling so all my devices connect to one wireless device, and I don't have to hotel-authenticate multiple times: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
Yeah, they did that to their cell phones in the 90s as well. My phone of choice was the Nokia 6256i (because it was the only phone you could tether on without paying Vzn for the privilege; it was only 1x speed, but that felt like broadband compared to the dialup speeds you could get on their officially approved tethering solutions.). The non-Verizon version was the 6255i, and that one had an FM radio, the ability to side-load ringtones, lots of interesting features that Vzn either wanted to charge you for or flat out wouldn’t let you have. Plus the hard coded Vzn wallpaper was annoying.
Flat network is what I’m looking for; I don’t have cameras or TVs, but I would like the downstairs computers to talk to the upstairs printer and vice versa, maybe put some kind of NAS in at some point.
Can you suggest a product? I’ve been looking on spAmazon, (that prime membership has to be good for something besides getting discounts on cat tuna at Whole Foods right?) and there are some portable routers like that one which basically take a WiFi input and a single Ethernet output. If I feed that to the router in place of the output from the FIOS box, you think it will let me communicate from say the upstairs desktop to the downstairs printer?
I’m trying to use this as a bridge method so I can have a couple of Ethernet ports but kinda lost on what to do. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_VND4G25K29B17NKSREPR?pldnSite=1
would I just go into the SL router and put it into bridge mode, then go into my device and configure settings appropriately?!.
I think this may be a product designed to do exactly what she wants. GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_1EDJKH5BCVKPZ6Y5820A?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
I think this may be a product designed to do exactly what she wants. GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_1EDJKH5BCVKPZ6Y5820A?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
Travel router.
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_fabc_QF4KT4V3QWG3R647QM4T
I'd grab a GL-iNet travel router and use the old Chromecast. With the travel router you add a layer of security between you and hotel wifi. This also allows multiple devices for hotels that have a limit. The model linked below is one of their lower end models. They have others you might consider. I own one and it was very easy to setup and get running through the captive portal. The routers also have openvpn built in for yet another layer of security.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
This is way more likely. The big hotel systems are the only ones with the infrastructure to actually track and block individualized services like this and they don't, which means it's probably a smaller hotel chain that's just blocking any non-standard stuff because it was the default with whatever package they bought for the hotel from some nearby IT group.
And ya, try it with a VPN and it'll probably work just fine. Another reason to set up a VPN within your actual home network.
Also, totally separate, but I'd very heavily recommend buying a Travel Router to use - You don't want to really use an open WiFi in a hotel without some kind of protections. I've used a number in the past (used to travel for work quite a bit), but TPLink and GL.iNet make the highest-rated ones (I use a TPLink) - This one should rock it for you and it means you only have to set up the wifi on your devices to connect to this thing, and it'll handle everything else: https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
I'd get one of these travel routers. It will connect through the captive portal and create a private network for all your devices. Once you have your own private network you can setup the Chromecast normally. I personally own one of these and am very happy with it.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
I love the small travel routers from GL-iNet.
They can be configured to become router, gateway, mini-NAS, bridge, access-point, repeaters and/or DHCP and DNS server. To and from WiFi and/or Ethernet.
They run OpenWrt (An embeded Linux variant) and have a decent web interface.
Hang one from the switch and let it handle DHCP and DNS.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
There are all sorts of devices that do that. I have used this one:
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_N3GWHAQDDKS10M01TRHA
I bought one of these, placed it in the garage close to the car created a second network that goes straight out through a VPN. The security is questionable, but we live half way up a mountain so the risks are minimal.
Of course they exist. But it’s not the norm.
I use this to connect a voip device that requieres an Ethernet connection. GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_YH7H8QGM9AFEZMTN343Z
Well i do have this coming by mail so hopefully this will work? GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_DTR25SBAZ43NMA22JTYQ im not sure if it will give me the same captive portal issues ive been having
Is this the router? GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_SH9J3RH3SJCE6EHHAX51
Just picked up one of these. I don’t ha e the service you have but I’m going to try a different one for a few host I have that can’t get past relayed due to their isp not allow static ip’s. VPN device
You can get a device that will connect to WiFi and then you connect the computer to the device with Ethernet like this GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_2BBC2EXWR4694K13KS3V
I have an edge router X. It’s completely the wrong item for what you’re asking
I just bought one of these GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2. Quite frankly it’s pretty fantastic for the price.
It’s tiny, will work as a router for Ethernet or to set up your own network on a shared hotel WiFi connection. It has OpenVPN which you configure just by dragging the zip file across onto it. You can also specify which devices use the VPN, and which go straight out.
I was slightly dubious when buying it, but it’s been a great little purchase.
A hotspot comes with what is called UPnP, it will automatically configure the port forwarding if your Internet router allows it. That is why you didn't need to manually configure port 44158 for your first hotspot. Though, this can only be done for one device. The same port cannot be opened for 2 hotspots.
For the second hotspot, as the previous person mentioned, you can go to your ISP and ask for another IP address. Alternatively you can run the second hotspot using a portable VPN router.
Something like this:
You would also need a subscription to a VPN that supports port forwarding. E.g PureVPN
I've ran this setup before on a shared network. It works and successfully forwards port 44158. It's a lil bit techy, but I'm sure their support could guide you through it, if needed.
I've been eyeing up a small travel router
this one specifically
for just such a use.
Connect the wireless router to the public wifi, then have your devices connect to the yellow box
And if you happen to be in a motel with hardwire, plug the router into the wall for your personal wifi
If you are out and about I would recommend a USB-powered switch. I can't recommend one, because I bought mine from AliExpress years ago, but it came in handy several times.
I also got this AP/one-port switch. Came in handy if I needed to give a device internet access, but everything I got was a hotspot from my phone for example.
Ended up getting this one:
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_0PRHFN67ZDD7QJEF8VDX
how temporary?
Maybe you could try getting the tmobile test drive, would work for a month at least.
alternatively you could try visible and use it as a hotspot (the cap can be bypassed by spending a bit of money on a router like this)
nothing, the trash can is as dumbed down as i can make it. everything is done on my synology router. the only real issue i have is double nat, but for that I use vpn when needed.
I have this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W for when im on the go and need to vpn, maybe you could pick that up and use ProtonVPN free tier, that would let you bypass the restricted ports and get the LineLink working again.
not ideal since you have to spend some $, but should fix your problem instead of waiting for some fix that is taking forever.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_FMSSCDWV6P60EN6QCKAX
look at it's features, it is small, vpns supported, low power usage 5v 1A that a small battery bank can power or even your phone can power if you have the correct cord and adapter, it can connect to hotel ethernet or public wifi and then make it's own vpn secured hotspot for your phone, there is always a solution man.
This.
Presumably he already has wifi at the home, so just needs to add an AP for the office building. OP, you can use just about any old router you may have lying around, or a $20 travel router, set in AP mode.
My s9+ used to connect to multiple devices then one day it wouldn't anymore. Its direct from Samsung BTW. I still don't have a speed cap but it will only allow one device to connect. So I got a glinet for $20 and run it off usb tether no limit on speed or number of devices. https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_Y0Z10M6D1CFKK3PREVD2?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
You need a router with a VPN embedded into it. It’ll appear to the corporate VPN as if you are just logged in from Denmark. You simply connect the router below to whatever wifi you are working from and after putting the VPN bundle on it, it’ll work fine. Shouldn’t notice any performance issues.
Most companies will say no if you request and it’s a lot of extra hassle for them
If you want to take the relatively low risk, get a VPN router : https://www.amazon.co.uk/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Converter-Pre-installed-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=vpn+router&qid=1609071866&sr=8-3
You can use a VPN on a TV. First just check your router, it might support OpenVPN directly, which would let you put all devices on your network behind the VPN. If your router doesn't support it you could pick up a mini travel router like a GL.iNet and connect it to your rouer, but use the VPN on the mini router.
This isn't the larger issue that you're pointing out, but if you get the sprint hotspot there are ways to connect it to an ethernet port.
Easiest would be something like this router connected with the hotspot's usb cable (if it can do that). If it can't, routers like that one can also be configured to repeat a wifi network over its ethernet port for devices without wifi connectivity.
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_fabc_j9pUFbFKJM14K
I have this one and it works fine. It’s been a few years since I purchased it so there might be better/newer products out there now. I just didn’t feel the need to purchase a newer one yet.
Get this:
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_6XvMFb7B2Z7QX
I have one of these and it’s brilliant. USB tether your jetpack to the travel router. USB power input to the router also charges the Jetpack. Then run Ethernet from the router to the PC or a switch and multiple devices. Travel router also has WiFi which is stronger than the Jetpacks. Turn off WiFi on Jetpack.
You can even bandwidth limit clients connected to the router (so your kids don’t suck up all of the jet pack bandwidth/data.
Look up GL.inet on Amazon. $20 bucks for a mini router. you can connect the router to your university's Wi-Fi, authenticate via Portal, and set up a VPN very easily.
I am also curious to know if visible will work with Orbi 4G LTE Router. I might consider getting one.
I have been using Visible with this portable router and it works fine tethering. I also have the Orbi extender but, unfortunately, it will not work with this router.
Most of the travel routers have this capability out of the box. Here is a cheap one that also supports the openwrt firmware for even more features if you want to tinker.
I think the repeater mode described does what you want.
If you need to cover dead spots at the home, you can also go the route of wifi mesh network with devices that have ethernet ports such as the netgear orbi. A lot more expensive solution tho.
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
This will work. If you want more than say 100Mbps buy a more expensive one.
Thanks for your reply.
If any iNet will work, any reason not to go for the https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=mp_s_a_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=glinet&qid=1600170890&sr=8-2
Seems like it has great reviews. My phone connection is only 3mbs so I don't need a lot of performance from the router.
This one?
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_HX9tFbBDBV6SY
This will connect to a host wifi network and give you your own wifi network. I use it on holiday to make modern life easier.
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 (Mango) Wireless Mini Portable VPN Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_P10tFb5A4ZJV2
T'as testé le catalogue Netflix américain du coup ?
J'hésite à me prendre un VPN juste pour ça. Je manque cruellement de bons films (ayant plus ou moins fait le tour de ce qui m'intéressait sur le catalogue français).
EDIt :
Et penses-tu que ce genre de boîtier fonctionnerait ?
In most cases apps that require checkin will detect if you're using a VPN and consider it a no-go (since people use VPNs to defeat geolocation and such).
Assuming it is working though, you have to consider your home network's upload bandwidth. If you connect to a VPN running on your home network, the fastest you can possibly download at via the VPN is a little slower than your home connection can upload at.
I honestly have never seen that request pop up (but then again I've never been away from home for >30 consecutive days in the past few years), but one possible alternative would be to get one of those little travel routers that you can customize, run OpenVPN on that, and then connect your phone to it. I got one of these to use when I travel for business, and it's pretty sweet - it can both provide a Wi-Fi hotspot and connect to another Wi-Fi hotspot at the same time, so I can connect it to a hotel's Wi-Fi and then connect to the AP that it itself advertises. Then, I have the box run the OpenVPN client, and then any device I attach to it has all its internet traffic transparently routed via my home network.
Same. I use this GL-MT300N-V2.
$20, essentially plug-and-play (ethernet, usb, and SMB share functionality built-in to router), and fewer wires than OP's solution. Works perfectly, no lag during FMVs.
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
its only 2.4Ghz, but basically the same as the other one, in features.
How long have you used the GLiNet products? I'm curious to hear about your experience with them.
I just bought the GLiNet router from Amazon for $20.49 + tax (shipping free for Prime).
I was really impressed with the features for that price: USB powered, one physical LAN and one physical WAN port, 3 programmable GPIOs, a programmable LED, an actual reset button that doesn't require a paperclip to operate, a custom A/B button that can trigger events, and a microSD slot. That's a lot of nice features for such an inexpensive device. The only feature that would make it better would be separate 2.4GHz and 5 GHz radios, but single onboard dual channel radio still lets you configure it for use as a wireless bridge repeater, albeit with half the bandwidth for a dedicated client.
OpenWrt 18.06 was already installed, along with a custom HTTP interface that was kind of neat. I flashed it with 19.03, which was painless via the upgrade option in the GUI. I was impressed that it had 11.5 MB free for pkg install after base setup, and after upgrading the base packages, it still had over 10 MB free.
It seemed to run really well for the first three days. However, now, after about 20 minutes of running, it just shuts off. I think it is overheating. I'm going to send it back, but I'm debating whether I should ask for a refund or an exchange. I'm hoping that I just happened to get a lemon. I'd love for this unit to work out.
Not as convenient/elegant as just tethering directly to the computer, but a small travel router is an option. Something like this.
Google Wifi isn't what you are looking for here. If you are simply needing an ethernet port to connect to that wireless network that you do have access to, you can use something like this (~$10):
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W
easy
i have this travel router https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_T8cCCb3M1F8WK
search for openwrt travel router it's available from many outlets
Ya I have 5 servers running with 5ips each with different dns i am starting to think realdebrid is a buy in whitelist or go home... My second thought was to probe all links in RD with premium account and feed to private server that my tunnels goto using whitelisted vpn providers...even doing this method would be cheaper then any vpn client on market... slap a logo with fancy html5/flash page and call it wonka links charge 1$ less but im not a asshole cough other premium(z) link providers
Pirate a pirate... going to call fcc? Lolz
I do understand cutting out VPN providers that break with first threat of cease and desist/subpoena like ipVanish that claims to be #1 firestick... This is a lie PIA is best of best even looking at real-debrids whitelist they made it on it meaning all VPNs are good to go
But killing small people like myself that have will to host own servers to save money idk bout that
On sale use as filter between modem and router!
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 Mini Travel Router, Repeater Bridge, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM, OpenVPN Client, Tor Compatible https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_9vCtCb1TZDCW1
Pi Zero-W (the w is for wireless, wifi and bluetooth)
I've got one of those, but also a $20 GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 which has better specs for this usage and runs OpenWRT core.
I haven't done too much with either one yet though.
It has some issues with mac cloning, but only in repeater mode. Only cost $20. Comes with open-wrt installed already.
Umm, no. Every well designed router deals with a network flood without too much issue. There might be a temporary slowdown, but you sure as heck shouldn't have to reboot the router. TPLink is just that crap.
I'd spend a few extra $$ and get one of these instead.
I'd suggest returning it and buying one of these regardless.
It's not just a better bang for your buck and didn't suffer from the problem in the first place, but it also is far more likely to receive firmware updates in the future.
yeah i don't get the hate. thanks. do you mean this?
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Do I plug this into my personal computer or my work laptop (im afraid since this has their own vpn etc.)? Have you had any problems traveling sofar?
You can get an inexpensive travel router and use it in Hotspot mode (some brands may call it WISP mode). It connects to the hotel wifi and creates a separate wifi network for your devices. Here is an example: https://amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
I have an Inseego Mifi 8000 instead of the M2000, but the concept should be the same.
In order to get decent internet I have a rather complicated setup, but you can take the parts that work for you.
A drawing of my setup is here: https://imgur.com/0YeBOpE
This is the cell booster I bought in 2018:
https://www.weboost.com/products/connect-4g
This is the newer version of my cell booster:
https://www.weboost.com/products/home-multiroom
I use the GL-MT330N-V2 in bridge mode, which basically converts the wifi from the Mifi 8000 to ethernet.
The GL-MT330N-V2 I bought is here:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_image_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
That ethernet is then used as the WAN for the ASUS RT-AC68U.
https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-Dual-Band-AiMesh-Router-AC1900/dp/B00FB45SI4
I have a second ASUS RT-AC68U in a remote building and they are connected via AiMesh.
The key here for your situation is that since the Mifi 8000 and GLi.net are connected via wifi, the USB on the Mifi 8000 is then plugged into a standard lamp timer to make it run on battery for 6 hours then charge for 6 hours.
Hopefully this is more helpful than confusing.
WiFi extenders can be cheaper and easier to configure, but a router would work okay too. I have a travel router that I use for this exact purpose when I'm at a hotel
I can highly recommend this. You can repeat a WiFi network with your own SSID and a VPN. One of my best purchases hands down.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W
You're welcome.
Some people have success using this router tethering from their phones to get around the 1 device and 5 mbps restrictions.
I bought this portable bugger on Amazon for $20:
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
It allows me to connect a visible phone to the router via hotspot then my children can connect their ipads to it via wifi while we are on road trips. It just uses a USB-A for a few watts of power. When we turn the vehicle off it kills power to the router. Works awesome bypassing visible one device hotspot limit!
I use this
I just got a linkzone 2 and needed to hook it up to my routers ethernet port. I purchased this for $20 on amazon https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W
It's the GL.İNET GL-MT30ON-V2
I got a USB-C to USB-A cable and I hooked it in this order:
Linkzone 2 --> USB-C -- USB-A --> GL.iNET --> Network Cable --> Router WAN port
I also logged into the GL.iNET router and turned off the wifi since I didn't need it.
Hope that helps!
buy a travel router — I use this one
https://smile.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
sign into the captive portal on a phone/laptop then anything that connects through the router won't see it
Visible wouldnt do that. He probably means something like this. 20$ on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_0x8SFbBDECXJT
Had trouble with PAL Gaming for a long time, iTAP couldn't help me, so I just got a travel router off amazon for $20 and made my own wifi network from my ethernet connection. The router (https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1543442763&sr=8-4) has an ethernet output as well so you can keep your ethernet connection while having your own wifi connection. Use the wifi for my google home mini.
I don't know if double NAT would be an issue but something like this runs wireguard:
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/
Alternatively, you could get this and install Linux/OpenBSD on it yourself and setup WG:
https://www.friendlyarm.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=274
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---------------------- ----------------------
| existing router | --> new device --> | laptop |
---------------------- ----------------------
I just don't know what to expect with the existing router and new device....
One used one of these for the past several years with nothing but excellent results.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/
I use this:
I often power it with a portable battery for convenience. It has quite a few features in a small package.
I second this.
For purchasing and sync'ing books...and possibly even being able to use the library directly from the device:
I would also suggest a portable VPN router/wifi repeater, not just for this, but in general for your lifestyle. Sounds like it may not even have to be ultra-portable.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Most VPN providers offer OpenVPN configs, but for this I would choose one that also offers Wireguard (faster on low power devices like this)
Keep the vpn connected to a server in the country where your credit card is issued for virtual/soft purchases.
I use the following. I also have a battery I travel with to power it, which makes it pretty convenient.
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
when i travel, i use this...........
a wifi router (usb powered), external drive conected to the router, shared folders, ipad connected to the "wifi", movies, tv shows, etc... for my kid....
GL-inet router. (the yellow one)
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_8?crid=ATGW26895BEJ&keywords=gl.inet+travel+router&qid=1664892765&qu=eyJxc2MiOiIzLjQzIiwicXNhIjoiMi45NCIsInFzcCI6IjIuOTEifQ%3D%3D&sprefix=gl.in%2Caps%2C354&sr=8-8
(i got it when it was 10-12usd 3-4 years ago)
so just to clarify i would need to buy the router itself such as this one (https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W) and then also buy a VPN service such as ExpressVPN correct?
This is true for iPhones. Perhaps you can Hotspot on an Android, don't know.
Since we're all iPhones, we uses the following device from Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
It took a little fiddling around to get the settings right, as well as using an external USB battery for power, but once it was set up all of my kids were able to share a single Internet connection. Of course, they need to be in the same general vicinity but the range is pretty good.
I don't know what "regular QoS" means. Some routers have means of explicitly identifying packets related to important flows, and prioritizing them, but not all.
I just reflash everything to openwrt. Here's a basic box I have used in a small house with slow dsl. https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_6?crid=17OM6DM3VMKXN&keywords=gl.inet&qid=1656903400&sprefix=gl.inet%2Caps%2C400&sr=8-6
Lacking two radios it's not a good choice for "mesh", but its a cheap way (ebay is often cheaper) for you to try cake to see if it helps, than for me to lecture. There is not a consumer router made in the last 15 years that cannot shape 20Mbit.
Good call on the light bulbs-- set up your own wifi network with a ($28 ) wifi travel router (just renames their network basically), and get some cheap wifi bulbs. Their usually dimmable with even color temp adjustable. And then you can say "Siri turn that crap off". Helps for bigger spaces-- far light switches.
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FYI you could always connect a ethernet (RJ-45) to WiFi bridge. They are not really expensive and really versatile. Working with 2.4 and 5.0 GHz. Here for example some recommendations. It's usually a small router which can be converted to a bridge with the right settings:
100Mbit Ethernet: https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=mp_s_a_1_8?keywords=gli+net&qid=1655555374&sr=8-8
Alternative 100Mbit Ethernet: https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Wireless-Portable-Travel-Router/dp/B00TQEX8BO/ref=mp_s_a_1_6?crid=2M4LZBGYYAM99&keywords=d-link+tp-link+small+router&qid=1655555765&sprefix=d-link+tp-link+small+route%2Caps%2C174&sr=8-6#
There are also some other d-link or tp-link devices with that form factor, just make sure they have OpenWrt support. The GLI one comes with a modified OpenWrt version by default, so I would always pick those. You can also flash stock OpenWrt over them.
This would broaden your choice for projectors by alot, because you don't need built in WiFi inside. Also it won't be sketchy and working fine. The chance that WiFi isn't working with the projectors firmware is much higher and you can't update it that easily. Hit me up if you or someone else reading that post needs any help with setting up a wifi-bridge for example.
business account with a static ip or get one of these and vpn then plug into your nighthawk:
My LZ was doing the same thing, so I got one of the GL.iNet Mango devices to bridge to my old wifi router and it was still overheating, so I bought a usb powered fan to put under both devices. I am not sure if it will allow me to post the link, so I'll also add the name. Prime had it here in a day or two and I used an old cell phone brick. It has worked really well. Sounds like you might get the Asus router, but this may still help you or someone else out! :)
Name: Wathai High Airflow Router Cooling Fan for Computer Cooler TV Box Wireless DC 5V USB Power 120mm 240mm Fan with Multi Speed Controller
Don't waste a rpi on this. Way overkill
I would use NUT on OpenWRT
I don't own one myself, but I've been keeping my eye on this one.
If you get a travel router, you can use public or shared networks and be protected by a firewall on the router. They are pretty cheap, and are quite handy. Say you and your family travel often. Instead of everyone setting up their devices at each location, everyone can be setup on the travel router, then you only have to setup the one device, the travel router. This will also allow you tomused a Chromeca7or Fire Stick type streaming device in hotels.
I use these GL-iNet GL-MT300N-V2
They are pretty handy. Not super fast, but works for surfing and streaming. I doubt they'd be good for gaming or anything needing higher speeds.They have a switch that you can just click on and off to activate a VPN service. I use Nord VPN, which is super slow and almost unusable with these routers. Nord only works with OpenVPN on these which only gives me like 8 mbps. If you find a VPN compatible with WireGuard, speeds are said to be up to 30mbps. Private Internet Access might be a good place to start ? looking, that's what I'm probably goinnto switch tomonce my Nord is expired.
I use these at an IRS VITA tax site that I coordinate...
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
They're very inexpensive, and do a great job protecting our tax prep traffic from the outside. In the instance that the wireless network we're bridging to is down, you can plug in a smart phone and use your phone's hotspot (if it's available as part of your plan). This has saved my bacon more than a few times, as we are a mobile clinic, and sometimes the venue doesn't have wifi for us.
If you don't mind spending a few bucks (to buy a portable router and a license to Proxifier) this is what I do:
Sideload this open-source SOCKS5 server app onto your phone
Buy a mini travel router. I personally have this one.
Set up the router, join the phone to the router, on the phone's WiFi settings, set a static IP (I use 192.168.8.100) and leave the "Gateway" field blank. This allows you to have the phone connected to the portable router while still getting data from cell towers.
Connect your computer to the same WiFi router, either via Wifi or ethernet
Install Proxifier on your computer, which lets all your traffic be routed to the SOCKS5 server app on your phone.
If your computer lets you spin up a WiFi access point then you don't need the travel router, and if you don't want to have all apps be routed through the phone (and only need a browser) you can skip buying Proxifier and just set the SOCKS5 settings on your browser (works well with Firefox).
[mango?](http://GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel Wireless Pocket VPN Router - WiFi Router/Access Point/Extender/WDS | OpenWrt | 2 x Ethernet Ports | OpenVPN/Wireguard VPN | USB 2.0 Port | 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_i_ZH4HKX3VK7NGHG4P69CY?_encoding=UTF8& Can double as on the go router as well
the first one i tried was this one because it had a lot of good reviews and was very inexpensive. I worked with it for hours and it worked fine on default settings, but changing anything (like the SSID) crapped it out.
So I bought this TP-link and even thought it's a little more expensive it's a much better unit. it's dual band (2.4/5Ghz) where the cheaper one was 2.4 only.
it's crazy small and powers off a usb cable.
se ho capito cosa intendi , si chiama accesso con "captive portal" ( generalmente open hotspot o alberghi con la schermata username password)
questo routerino supporta quel tipo di accesso
https://docs.gl-inet.com/en/3/tutorials/connect_to_a_hotspot_with_captive_portal/
I have the Inseego M2000 and I use this adapter https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_3?crid=18Z7SZDB8FCDS&keywords=mango+wifi&qid=1641924356&sprefix=mango+wifi%2Caps%2C128&sr=8-3 .
I don't really have any issues with this setup. You do lose a little bit of speed this way but not enough for it to matter with just streaming.
It's been a while since I've tried - unsuccessfully. This is probably an easier solution: https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Weird. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
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Don't know where it went but I added it here
Got it.
Try this for a pre-built/hardened firewall/VPN that can let you into your home network- https://firewalla.com/products/firewalla-red
Or this DIY version on Raspberry Pi. But be aware, if you screw up, you're inviting the Internet into your home. https://restoreprivacy.com/vpn/raspberry-pi/
These Mango routers have the option for an active portal and are like $25. I use one as a travel router and am pretty happy with wide array of features: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_3EYFYV6MRT8J3K9X9SRX
Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $26.89 | $26.89 | 4.0/5.0 |
GL.iNet GL-MT1300 (Beryl) VPN Secure Travel Gigab… | $71.90 | $71.90 | 4.5/5.0 |
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One way would be using something like a pihole or installing custom firmware on compatible router which can block ads at DHCP level and then using those as your access points for wifi. These custom solutions are DIY, if you prefer to buy something preinstalled, then look for vpn routers, these ones are quite affordable:
Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $26.90 | - | 4.0/5.0 |
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Purchase a travel router like this one and you can get the Nanit on a hotel network: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx\_yo\_dt\_b\_search\_asin\_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $28.89 | $28.89 | 4.0/5.0 |
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Get one of these:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
It lets you share a single internet account on multiple devices. Since you’re both gonna wanna be on Instagram and Facebook posting photos it’ll save you some money!
I don't know which miner you have, but I have a rak mntd. I purchased a dedicated IP from PIA and attempted to configure OpenVPN on a GL.inet mini router (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_8E1BKFEHHYPG31CZ5YJ3?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1), only to find out later that PIA's dedicated IP addresses only work on devices that run the PIA app or client, like a laptop, smartphone, smart tv, etc - NOT openVPN.
The IP's through their VPN seems to be static already so I might try running the VPN anyway and see if I get stuck in relay mode.), only to find out later that PIA's dedicated IP addresses only work on devices that run the PIA app or client, like a laptop, smartphone, smart tv, etc - NOT OpenVPN.
I use a MiFi plugged into a GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 and leave it powered by a USB power source 24/7. I guess that's probably not awesome from a battery management point of view, but .. whatever.
I use one of these to do exactly that with my DS920+:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
It works surprisingly well, and I imagine the TP-Link you mentioned will be just as good.
Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 (Mango) Wireless Mini Portab… | £24.69 | £24.69 | 4.4/5.0 |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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Can't help with support WiFi adapters but you could buy something like this. Use it in repeater mode and plug the desktop into the LAN port.
This will do what you need, though if you need more than 1 ethernet port you will also need a switch.
Item | Current | Lowest | Reviews |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2(Mango) Portable Mini Travel… | $29.89 | $29.89 | 4.1/5.0 |
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So, after a little digging I think I'm gonna go with a mango router and setup the VPN on that. Gonna go with the mango router and setup a VPN on that. https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-Pre-installed-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W?th=1
Currently I'm running an older version, similar to one of these:
GL-MT300N-V2; really any portable travel router that can run opensource software should work.
Here's the the reference documentation for OpenWrt
I use the GL-inet travel router, it's easy to configure. Here's a link on Amazon $30
However, Visible has caught on to the TTL change and I'm not aware of any change that will work to get over the 5 mbps. If someone else knows how please DM me.
because I have a cloud based plex server with 22TB on it that I have to move off of my edu google drive by June.
Sorry. I am in the middle of looking for a new plex/storage solution. I used to have a lovely home setup. Now my ex wife has a lovely home setup.
What about these things? https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/
Run it's wan port to my current routers lan port. Configure the DHCP server for a different network. Configure the VPN client on it. Set up wifi. $30. I would need one for each network/VPN, but it is fully scalable.
I think it's OK to post an Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Looks like the raised the price since I bought one last spring, but still cheap. It has a USB port for USB tethering from the phone, and the port has enough power to keep the phone charged. Separate port for the power supply. It has 2 ethernet ports, but wireless is the easy way to connect multiple devices to it. Visible just sees the 1 tether hotspot.
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Am I correct that this device, cheaper than a Pi, will do what I want without any of the more complicated setup?
So I found 2 that could work Which one do you recommend and are these going to work?
and
All you need is a GL-iNet travel router (link below) plug your phone into the router and allow the phone to tether and you're good to go. There are settings to let you exceed the 5 mbps restricktion Visible puts on hotspots.
Here is how I envision getting quicker page loads, a secure connection, and all our/my devices connected at the lowest in-flight rate.
It takes some prep time (~2 hours?) and upfront cost, but some reading might already have all the equipment (under $100).
GETTING DATA - If GoGo is available, check these ideas out](https://www.google.com/search?q=gogo+internet+free+reddit). - If you really want free internet inflight, it might be as simple as a VPN. - If you are not sure where the ethical line is drawn, find someone else’s MAC address. I’ll explain how you will use it further below. - I prefer to buy the internet data from my phone’s browser. In Settings you can find your phones MAC address for later or in your Network Utility if using a laptop.
TRAVEL ROUTER - Bring a travel router (smaller than a wallet) like this $30 one (GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2) or the one I have for $70 (GL.iNet GL-AR750S). Either can be powered by USB. - Update the base firmware before making changes to settings. - Setup your SSID/password (I’d use same as home network) - Setup WireGuard ($6/m but you can get just one month) to trade speed for privacy - Change the settings to “Hide SSID” if you’re worried about “getting in trouble” or another bored passenger trying to pry into your network.
SPEEDING UP THE INTERNET
- Setup PiHole on a Pi Zero. This will prevent ads from ever being loaded saving bandwidth and speeding up your internet experience. You can learn about why this works if you are curious.
- Connect the Pi Zero to the travel router over WiFi. r/Homelab users will say you should connect USB to Ethernet but connecting over WiFi will still work fine.
- Set the DNS settings so that the PiHole is being used.
GETTING ONLINE - Get a MAC Address of a device with data service from one of the processes above. - Set the travel router to Repeater Mode and change it’s MAC Address to the one with data service. - Leave the travel router in your seat and take your inflight snack to the restroom. Snack on the toilet while browsing Reddit using your “hacked” internet service.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Converter-Pre-installed-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Cheap as chips, supports WireGuard. It's OpenWRT under the hood, and you can get to it easily.
GLi.Net Mango Router change Firewall rule for TTL to 65. Unlimited hotspot speeds and devices. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
I'm assuming the "awning connection box" is proprietary and that the awning is controlled through the cloud.
So buy a cheap router running OpenWRT, connect its WAN port to your ASUS, the LAN port to your awning, set its LAN to a different subnet than your primary one and set its firewall to not allow "local" network traffic or only to the Internet address it wants to talk to if you know it. This one runs OpenWRT natively and is $20.
https://smile.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/
You do get double NAT but it is a simpler solution than VLANs or a transparent firewall.
My setup might interest you for ideas. I have conventional pfSense bare metal with cable but for I also use a local hotspot as a WAN failover. So the same should work for you if you just want to tie into that hotspot.
I bought this $20 guy https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ which connects to the hotspot and configured it as Firewall->DMZ On. My pfSense interface gets an address on this network as a WAN. It's been working great for a couple years and I don't even notice when my cable goes down so I'm sure it would work for you.
That's exactly what I do with one of these
Thank you for your response. I got this https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=travel+router&qid=1611853354&sr=8-5 and comes with openWRT. It is amazing
I'm a Principal Software Engineer for Video Streaming Technologies at Beachbody (Home Fitness)
Here is the setup I have which is ultra reliable. I spend 3-6 hours a day on Zoom calls and am on Slack all day.
https://www.mobilemusthave.com/Mobile-Internet-Bundles_c_44.html
I have the "ULTIMATE ROAD WARRIOR RV & BOAT INTERNET ACCESS BUNDLE"
https://www.mobilemusthave.com/Ultimate-Road-Warrior-RV-Boat-Internet-Access-Bundle_p_168.html
For SIM cards I currently have: 1. Visible (Verizon Pre Pay Service for $25 a month with party pay) https://www.visible.com/ 2. Cricket (AT&T Pre Pay Service) Simply Data - https://www.cricketwireless.com/support/plans-and-features/data-only-plans.html $35 for 20GB 3. Google Fi (T-Mobile & Sprint) $10 per gig (as a backup)
I also have the Calyx hotspot that I USB connect to a GL.iNET router then connect to the pepwave WAN port.
https://calyxinstitute.org/membership/devices/linkzone-2 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
I then setup Pepwave Speed Fusion which can bond all available connections (Sim 1, Sim 2, WAN, and any campground or starbucks wifi I can get)
This has been a pretty reliable setup. I'm thinking about upgrading to an unlimited AT&T or Verizon SIM, but so far I haven't needed that much data. The biggest benefit for me for upgrading to the unlimited sim would be post paid priority on data. Visible and Cricket are lower priority in congested areas.
I follow these guys (they have a youtube channel) to keep up with the latest data plans from the carriers https://www.rvmobileinternet.com/
They also have a TON of guides and reviews of all the equipment. Here's the in-depth review of the router I have https://www.rvmobileinternet.com/gear/pepwave-max-transit/
Ask me any questions since I have been researching and building this for the last 6 months.
I just solved this exact problem myself! My work laptop is very locked down so I can't install my own VPN on it, and it already has a company VPN running. The way I got around it was with this cheap $20 portable travel router: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Let me know if you have any questions about how it can be used.
No WiFi but you could use something like this to connect wirelessly
https://smile.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
This travel router is what you want!
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 (Mango) Wireless Mini Portable https://smile.amazon.de/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_fabc_MDqZFb2XKEKH9?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
you could use a gl.inet router like the mango. It has ethernet ports and can repeat the signal from the hotspot or usb tether. They are like $20
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Maybe I missed it, but how were your test clients connected? Obviously Wifi won't do the speeds you need. You need to USB tether to a router or bridge.
Like these:
Note that the Wifi on these is still crap, so you'll want to connect it via USB to your Inseego, then use Ethernet to you're existing AP/MESH.
USB power to the travel router also powers the Inseego through it's USB (though not QC).
a lot of people have luck using a VPN router. i personally have this one, it works well enough:
20 bucks for this and it does work well. GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Allows for usb tethering to Ethernet for cheap.
I just bought this and it's flipping amazing https://www.amazon.fr/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
It is ULTRA portable, tiniest little thing. Unfortunately maxes out around 30mbps, but that's more than most Airbnbs and hotels will support anyway. (I was recently at an Airbnb with Fiber so it mattered. The only one in 18mos with fiber though.)
You can connect it to a Wifi signal and then plug your ethernet into the back. The best part for me is that I can avoid typing a new Wifi password into 2 cell phones, 2 laptops, and a security camera every time I change rooms. Instead, I just leave those all connecting to this device. And then I just plug this device into the ethernet (if available). I have not gotten to test it yet with using IT to connect to another wifi signal (repeater mode).
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
$20. I've used these for several purposes and set them up for other family members. One of them is used in my pfSense for a failover internet from a local public hotspot. Great product.
The mini router have an ethernet port it also have a USB port that supports smb through that port.
This router if your interested. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Wireless Mini Portable Travel Router, Mobile Hotspot in Pocket, WiFi Repeater Bridge, Range Extender, OpenVPN Client, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/
Cheaper than a pi and easier.
So if I get this (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_BiKCFb1WDQ0ME) and a extra phone (does it have to be a iPhone?) I’m all set?
Is USB Tethering faster then just using the hotspot feature?
Sorry not last question, could I flash this with OpenWRT and easy tether?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fab_AbKzFb5EA0T0D
New s9+ update made it so only one device can connect. I would assume that will happen to other devices also. Got one of these https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Or even cheaper buy a vpn router and set it before your normal router.
there are more expensive versions with better speeds, depends on what you need.
Your question got me curious. This little device for $20might be able to get it done for you. It supports USB tethering, EasyTether if you need it, and a VPN. To get it into your usual router you should be able directly connect it via ethernet.
If you can't get it to work, you can always get one of these:
There are different colors and prices, you can test it out or send it back if you can't get it to work. Also check youtube for setup.
The one in the original post is a residential model that plugs into a wall socket. That's a bit of a pain for van use for a couple different reasons.
The traditional way this is handled outside the home is with a travel router. One that can be powered off 12v or USB is especially useful in a van. It is placed somewhere with a decent "view" out the window and repeats the signal in the van as HELLABRIANSTYLE_WIFI or whatever you want to call it.
This $20 model is powered by usb and is probably the most popular.
If you are interested in the travel router approach I have the previous version of that one, a GL-MT300A, sitting here unused on my workspace; I upgraded to a slightly more expensive model with geekier features. On a mountaintop in Oregon at the moment but will be in town in about 5 days and can mail it to you care of general delivery at the local USPS or whatever. Circle of life, hakuna matata, etc. If you want it PM me where you want it sent.
If you don't want this one let me know and I'll offer it up elsewhere since I already dug it out of storage.
Inception-style bonus: check out what's on the Chromebook screen in the router pic above.
Thankyou, I really appreciate your help. Could I possibly connect this through LAN to my router and setup the Smart DNS on it? https://www.amazon.co.uk/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Converter-Pre-installed-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=vpn+router&qid=1595549750&sr=8-3
Ideally would be nice if it had another Lan port so I could hard wire it back into my Apple TV.
I'm not really a network wiz but I could hopefully use that as a totally different hotspot to my normal Router for my Apple TV? That was I can leave everything else I use running through my regular router.
Unfortunately the one you bought is out of stock. The same company also makes this device which advertises four modes: router, repeater, AP, and hotspot. Which mode are you operating yours in?
ETA: They also make this, which looks closer to what you have.
Yes. You need a small wireless access point that plugs into your router, which provides access to your network via WiFi. For example for £20 you can pick up a "mango" (see amazon link below), or if you need something a bit more powerful, any full sized "Access Point" on Amazon will do.
So you'd have this setup:
Router --> Access Point ))))) WIFI (((((( Alexa (pointed at the wifi).
Example of a cheap mini access point:
Sure, there's various details across my posts and comments, but here's the highlights:
A magnetic log module More details from the same thread about the rest of the kit A post from an "unknown user" on what their setup was, from which I've "borrowed" heavily
The heart of it is a low-cost travel router from Amazon onto which I've install Mosquitto.
I've got some custom code using NodeRed on my laptop to display the state of the various devices based on the "status" messages they send, and then everything is D1 Mini's with various accessory boards connected to the travel router.
I'd like to think at one day I might release this as a "proper" product, so I'm wary of sharing code etc, but I can highly recommend writing your own Arduino library that deals with the generic stuff for each module (WiFi and MQTT connections, firmware updates etc) so you can include that repeatedly and then just worry about dealing with the content of the MQTT message.
Hope that helps!
Idd, something like this https://www.amazon.de/-/nl/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=sr_1_3?__mk_nl_NL=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&dchild=1&keywords=glinet&qid=1587454454&sr=8-3
Just look for gl.inet on amazon. Maybe you also want an ethernet adapter to connect the chromecast to the router and hide the wifi.
https://www.amazon.de/-/nl/dp/B07J6QRTGX/ref=psdc_1626220031_t2_B01N1X28F1
Clone your current device MAC address in this router. I use this $20 Mango router (well I see Amazon raised the price 15% since I bought it).
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W/
I set it up to use pfSense interface as DMZ. Has worked great for over 2 years.
Okay, I thought the travel router I mentioned was cheaper than this, but there are many brands to choose from on amazon, etc. Yesterday I saw someone using them in another project.
I have two of the yellow GL.inet devices. I bought a couple over the past few years and initially they were not as stable but after updating the the latest software they're rock solid. I'm using one as a bridge, and one as a VPN access point and both bandwidth and stability are great.
If you are not in the USA and the 1.10.28 firmware update is not yet available to you, I have created a youtube guide on how to update the firmware by connecting the TRADFRI gateway to a Smart Router and connecting to a USA VPN.
The GL.iNet Smart Router can be purchased on Amazon https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_ztOeEb0D5R21A
yup, I just bought this one: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_TxV5DbTZD4JDK
this is the $20 model. I used it so that I could connect to my VPN on my RokuTV.
I have the GL-iNet 300m GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Mini Travel... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
This thread is a little old so maybe you've figured it out already.
You're thinking along the right lines but perhaps a little cheaper and easier than a raspberry pi is an open VPN router like this one:
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
You can attach this to your current router; it broadcasts it's own SSID so you can connect your Chromecast to this, along with the casting device. Then any other device you don't want VPN'd just stays connected to your original SSID.
It's a bit of a pain to switch Chromecast WiFi networks so just disable/ enable open VPN in the router. You can also change the VPN region as required.
Setup can be a bit finicky - here's a guide from one VPN provider. Good luck!
https://torguard.net/knowledgebase.php?action=displayarticle&id=256
I have a previous model of this guy:
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNET-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-300Mbps-Performance/dp/B073TSK26W
Work fine, pretty basic but it'll do the job.
There are quite a few more options nowadays and if you look at 'best travel routers' lists this one is always on there:
https://www.amazon.com/HooToo-Wireless-10400mAh-External-Performance/dp/B074LHG47K
Buy a travel router like this one:
https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Sy2TDbAZJ3SFP
You’ll want to double nat the network. Grab this and connect it to the wifi network then connect your devices to it.
I would highly recommend https://www.amazon.co.uk/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Pre-installed-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W (no idea where you're based so just linking the UK version here).
This little thing allows you to set-up a wifi from your mobile phone (using just usb), ethernet, wifi and allows you to set-up a hotspot. More options are in there too such as having the hotspot go through a VPN (any openvpn config works I believe), there's much more on there.
Okay, here is possibly a solution -
​
Get the Chromecast dongle -
https://store.google.com/us/product/ethernet_adapter_for_chromecast?hl=en-US
​
Next get one of the pocket WiFi routers, put it in client mode, with DHCP server
enabled in a different IP address subnet for the LAN port. You may also add the WAN
port to the local LAN (that way you can connect two devices)-
​
https://www.amazon.com/GL-iNet-GL-MT300N-V2-Repeater-Performance-Compatible/dp/B073TSK26W/
​
Connect your laptop over wired connection to the pocket router, and put it in client mode and connect to your WiFi, accept the terms and conditions, and get it going. It should then serve as a WiFi to Wired internet provider. At this point, disconnect your laptop from the router and connect it to the chromecast dongle.
​
This should work in almost all cases, particularly if the web-page terms has to be accepted every time a WiFi network connection is established. I use this technique to connect wired devices in Starbucks kind of locations.
​
​
​
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/
Says it has OpenWrt pre-installed. Is it possible to plug a switch into this router then plug it into my home router?
or a cheapo router like this one, that has openwrt support
GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 Mini Travel Router, Repeater Bridge, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM, OpenVPN Client, Tor Compatible https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_xOaUBb9T5AYBV
a travel router with a usb gsm module could do
I built my van cave out of scrap and used materials to keep the cost down and to make the most out of stuff I had at hand or found cheap on CL.
For me, these were the requirements:
a travel router with a usb modem could work. there are some other models that have external antenna connectors, or you can mod the internals of ones without that.
Rebranded version on amazon for a few bucks more:
Original article:
https://medium.com/@tomac/a-15-openwrt-based-diy-pen-test-dropbox-26a98a5fa5e5
Spend $20 and buy one of these. It's going to be as good as any TPLink router and will handle this without a problem.
Did this exact thing at a condo to put Google homes on a mooched wifi network from across the street! Bought a $20 travel router form Amazon and works perfectly. Here's what I got, but anything with a login page ability would work.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_YuQ4FbM8XFQP9
Pick up a $20 travel router. I use this one. https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B073TSK26W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
This will connect to your phone's single hotspot connection, and all of your wifi devices connect to the internetz through this. When you move to a new site, you just join this travel router to the new campsite's wifi or keep using your phone hotspot and not have to switch a zillion other devices over. Also secures your devices from other people joined to the campground wifi.
GLiNet makes decent portable routers very cheap. I suggest to get one, it makes many things a lot easier.
GL.iNET GL-MT300N-V2 Mini Travel Router, Repeater Bridge, 300Mbps High Performance, 128MB RAM, OpenVPN Client https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_tai_PdFODbF7K8R66
You can stream local content to the Chomecast without internet. OP just needs a wifi router. I would suggest a little portable router like this one. What I'm NOT sure of is if the Plex app can stream local sync'ed content to Chromecast. Because the synced content is already converted to something the phone can play I don't see why the Chromecast wouldn't be able to play it. I can test this setup tonight and report back to you!
You'll need a router that supports openVPN and you have to run the eero in bridge mode with it. Check your VPN for instructions on how to setup routers, they will have instructions, most likely for OpenWRT, DD-WRT, PFSENSE, and possibly others and give you an idea of the steps involved for each. You can decide based on what your VPN provider supports which router to go with. Something like this might be enough or you might want to get something a little more expensive if you want faster speeds.