Original Post
Written by
Edited December 1, 2023
at 11:31 PM
by
GL-iNet [gl-inet.com] has
Beryl (GL-MT1300) Dual-band Wireless Travel Router (Refurbished) on sale for
$49.
Shipping is free.
Product Details:
- Refurbished Beryl (GL-MT1300)
- "All refurbished products are officially certified and function perfectly."
- One-year limited warranty
- Comes with packaging and accessories
- Up to 867Mbps (5GHz) + 400Mbps (2.4GHz) gigabit WiFi speeds
- Support up to 40 wireless devices simultaneously
- Tethering, 3G/4G USB Modem Compatible
- Lightweight design (184g)
- IPv6 supported
- OpenVPN & WireGuard pre-installed
- Pre-installed Tor service
- Cloudflare, Supported
- Toggle switch for VPN/Tor is also included
- Pre-installed the latest stable OpenWrt (19.07.4)
- DDR3L 256MB, NOR Flash 32MB
- Up to 512GB MicroSD slot (TF card is not included in the package)
- USB 3.0 port
- 3 Gigabit Ethernet ports
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When I'm traveling, I put any wifi devices (phones, laptops, tablets, kindles, even an Amazon Echo Show 5 I use as a travel clock) all behind the router, and then plug it in to the ethernet jack in the hotel.
If there's no ethernet jack, you can also use repeater mode to have the router connect to hotel wifi. Easiest way is to connect your phone to hotel wifi, sign in via their web portal, then connect to your router's wifi and click the button to clone your phone's MAC address. Boom. As far as the hotel is concerned, your router is your phone.
One thing I love is that these routers are USB C-powered, meaning it will run off a battery pack. I used it at a company picnic to demo a VR headset for people, with wireless casting to a laptop for those watching. There was no electricity in the picnic pavilion, and had this router up for about 6 hours on a 10,000mAh battery, which still had plenty of charge remaining.
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For me I carry it almost everyday, at work they have a guest network. Added my Wireguard VPN config. And connect my devices to it. Now I don't have to individually connect each device to my home VPN.
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When I'm traveling, I put any wifi devices (phones, laptops, tablets, kindles, even an Amazon Echo Show 5 I use as a travel clock) all behind the router, and then plug it in to the ethernet jack in the hotel.
If there's no ethernet jack, you can also use repeater mode to have the router connect to hotel wifi. Easiest way is to connect your phone to hotel wifi, sign in via their web portal, then connect to your router's wifi and click the button to clone your phone's MAC address. Boom. As far as the hotel is concerned, your router is your phone.
One thing I love is that these routers are USB C-powered, meaning it will run off a battery pack. I used it at a company picnic to demo a VR headset for people, with wireless casting to a laptop for those watching. There was no electricity in the picnic pavilion, and had this router up for about 6 hours on a 10,000mAh battery, which still had plenty of charge remaining.
When I'm traveling, I put any wifi devices (phones, laptops, tablets, kindles, even an Amazon Echo Show 5 I use as a travel clock) all behind the router, and then plug it in to the ethernet jack in the hotel.
If there's no ethernet jack, you can also use repeater mode to have the router connect to hotel wifi. Easiest way is to connect your phone to hotel wifi, sign in via their web portal, then connect to your router's wifi and click the button to clone your phone's MAC address. Boom. As far as the hotel is concerned, your router is your phone.
One thing I love is that these routers are USB C-powered, meaning it will run off a battery pack. I used it at a company picnic to demo a VR headset for people, with wireless casting to a laptop for those watching. There was no electricity in the picnic pavilion, and had this router up for about 6 hours on a 10,000mAh battery, which still had plenty of charge remaining.
"If there's no ethernet jack, you can also use repeater mode to have the router connect to hotel wifi. Easiest way is to connect your phone to hotel wifi, sign in via their web portal, then connect to your router's wifi and click the button to clone your phone's MAC address. Boom. As far as the hotel is concerned, your router is your phone."
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I've used the GL-AR750S-Ext on RCCL with no issues so far.