Unifi Travel Router

(blog.ui.com)

317 points | by flurdy 13 hours ago

29 comments

  • wateralien 12 hours ago
    I never travel without my GL-AXT1800. Saved me so many times: https://www.gl-inet.com/products/gl-axt1800/ I’m actually on it right now.
    • guiambros 9 hours ago
      Same! And the best thing is that you can install Tailscale, so you can connect to your tailnet, and exit all traffic through one of your nodes (e.g., your home/office network).

      It's incredibly useful, with the added bonus that you don't need to install tailscale client in any of your travel devices (phone, tablet, work computer, etc).

      • jasonkester 5 hours ago
        I’m seeing a lot of this same comment here, so I went to check out this tailscale thing, which clearly I must need.

        Can anybody explain what Tailscale is, does, or why everybody seems to have it?

        Looking at their website, it’s just a huge wall of business jargon. Really! Read it. It’s nothing but a list of enterprise terminology. There’s a “how it works “ page full of more (different) jargon, acronyms and buzzwords, but no simple explanation of why everybody on this thread seems to be paying money for this thing?

        Any help? Should I just pay them my $6/month and hope I figure it out at some point?

        • KnuthIsGod 5 hours ago
          Basically it is managed Wireguard. Tailscale does say it, but it is buried under marketing speak.
          • walthamstow 2 hours ago
            It's also P2P mesh rather than hub and spoke which is quite important
          • quaintdev 4 hours ago
            This. People are doing the same thing that OP mentioned in this thread.
        • rahimnathwani 2 hours ago
          Sign up for free using Google Sign In.

          Install the tailscale client on each of your devices.

          Each device will get an IP address from Tailscale. Think about that like a new LAN address.

          When you're away from home, you can access your home devices using the Tailscale IP addresses.

          • nottorp 2 hours ago
            They still tie you to Google?
            • fragmede 2 hours ago
              Microsoft, Github, and Apple login are the other options if you don't want to use Google.
              • nottorp 2 hours ago
                So zero options that will not tie their service to some other service still.

                So much for resilience.

                • jpdb 1 hour ago
                  You can also use passkeys so you aren't tied to a centralized SSO provider.
                  • nottorp 52 minutes ago
                    ... after i sign up for the service with a google/microsoft/whatever account, i suppose.
                • als0 1 hour ago
                  You can self host with Headscale.
        • konradb 5 hours ago
          I don't think you need to pay $6 a month to try it out.

          Install it on all the machines you want. When you are running it on the machine, it is networked to the other machines that are running it. Now make an 'exit node' on one of those machines by selecting it in the UI, and all your gear can access the internet via that exit node. Your phone can run it. Your apple tv can run it. You can have multiple exit nodes. So you can have a worldwide network and not once did you have to open ports in firewalls etc.

          • Tor3 1 hour ago
            How does it compare to Zerotier? The way I understand it it's kind of overlapping functionality but not necessarily everything. What I want from Zerotier is basically what you described about Tailscale.

            The two problems I have with zerotier are:

            1) It's supposed to let a mobile device like an Android tablet route its traffic through zerotier (functioning as a VPN to my home site, in this case). However, I've never got that to work. It's running, but doesn't affect anything network-wise for the other applications (unlike running e.g. openvpn on it)

            2) On a couple of computers with specific routing set up to various destinations, when Zerotier runs it simply blocks all of that and there's no way for me to continue accessing anything else than the Zerotier network. No fiddling with routing tables etc. changes any of that. On other computers, also some running OpenVPN, Zerotier does not interfere. I've never figured out what causes this.

            So, in short, I'm pondering if I should ditch Zerotier and try Tailscale instead. If it does the same - I simply want a way to connect my devices, but I also don't want to lose total control over routing. For mobile devices I would want full VPN, for computers I don't. Edit. So, I'm both after connecting my multiple networks, as well as VPN'ing certain things or devices through another location.

            Thanks for any input on this.

          • jasonkester 4 hours ago
            So, somewhere on that website, there’s a free version that can be downloaded onto a desktop and run without signing up for their service?

            I think I understand what it does now. So, basically you leave a computer running at home, and this thing lets you pretend to be running your internet stuff through it while you’re on the road?

            • konradb 3 hours ago
              > So, somewhere on that website, there’s a free version that can be downloaded onto a desktop and run without signing up for their service?

              If you go to https://tailscale.com/pricing?plan=personal

              The first plan on the left called 'Personal' is free.

              It uses a central orchestrator which is what requires you to sign up. If you prefer to self host your orchestrator you can look into Headscale, an alternative that seeks to be compatible with the clients.

              > So, basically you leave a computer running at home, and this thing lets you pretend to be running your internet stuff through it while you’re on the road?

              That's one thing you can do with it, yes. You can also run custom DNS entries across it, ACLs, it is very flexible.

              • jasonkester 3 hours ago
                Ugh. On mobile, the first plan on the pricing page is “ starter” for $6. The plan to the right is partly visible, indicating that you can scroll that way. There’s nothing to indicate that you can scroll left.

                A less hostile website design would have (again) saved me a question.

                • mcsniff 3 minutes ago
                  It seems like it defaults to Business, which is paid. If you tap "Personal" you'll see the free plan.

                  Sorry, but try a little harder. Tailscale isn't hostile, but it seems you are -- you claim to think you need it, but don't know what it does and can't put in the effort to determine and foist those inabilities on Tailscale?

                  I've been using Tailscale for many years now and they have a terrific product.

            • barrkel 51 minutes ago
              You can run it on a capable router or on a RPi, or on your NAS. It's especially useful if you want to self-host (e.g. Immich). You can use it to authenticate for ssh if you like, or simply give you an IP you can ssh to.

              It's especially handy if you want a secondary way in, in case you have problems connecting using wireguard, since it supports using a relay if you're stuck in a hotel with a heavily restricted connection.

              If you run DNS at home, you can even configure it to use your home DNS and route to your home subnet(s).

            • omnimus 4 hours ago
              The service is free up to certain amount of connected people and devices. You most likely don't need to pay for it. I am pretty heavy user and don't. It is virtual private network orchestrator. It allows you to connect to other devices that you add to your network as long as they are connected to the internet. So your office computer, home server or NAS. If you have some home automation like home assistant you can connect to it from anywhere. That kind of stuff.
        • gertrunde 4 hours ago
          Basic version is it's a sort of developer focused zero trust network service.

          Encrypted overlay network based on wireguard tunnels, with network ACLs based around identity, and with lots of nice quality-of-life features, like DNS that just works and a bunch of other stuff.

          (Other stuff = internet egress from your tailscale network ('tailnet') through any chosen node, or feeding inbound traffic from a public IP to a chosen node, SSH tied into the network authentication.

          There is also https://github.com/juanfont/headscale - which is a open source implementation of some of tailscale's server side stuff, compatible with the normal tailscale clients.

          (And there are clients for a very wide range of stuff).

          • jasonkester 4 hours ago
            I can’t tell if you’re trying to help, or just getting into the spirit of the website’s “how it works (using ten pages of terminology and acronyms we just made up)” page.
            • viccis 4 hours ago
              None of the terminology or acronyms that user used were made up or unique to this. I think you are blaming other people for your unfamiliarity with this kind of tech.

              It is simply a managed service that lets you hook devices up to an overlay network, in which they can communicate easily with each other just as though they were on a LAN even if they are far apart.

              For example, if you have a server you'd like to be able to SSH into on your home network, but you don't want to expose it to the internet, you can add both it and your laptop to a Tailscale network and then your laptop can connect directly to it over the Tailscale network no different than if you were at home.

              • jasonkester 4 hours ago
                Sorry if I appeared rude. That was very much tongue in cheek.

                But notice how you just did a much better job of explaining what this thing does without using any jargon at all. The jargon helps if everyone already knows what you’re talking about. It hurts if anyone doesn’t.

                That’s what I’m poking fun at. There’s a trait in lots of engineers I’ve worked with over the years to be almost afraid to talk about tech stuff in layman terms. Like they’re worried that someone will think less of them because they used words instead of an acronym. Like they won’t get credit for knowing what a zero trust network is if they describe the concept in a way that regular people might understand.

                One of those guys was certainly in charge of this company’s website copy.

                • aembleton 3 hours ago
                  > But notice how you just did a much better job of explaining what this thing does without using any jargon at all.

                  There was plenty of jargon and acronyms like LAN and SSH. You're just used to those ones.

            • arcanemachiner 4 hours ago
              Your ignorance of the topic is no excuse to be rude to someone who's trying to help you.
            • jaapz 4 hours ago
              That's just networking jargon
        • weinzierl 3 hours ago
          Extending the question:

          In my mind Tailscale was primarily to expose local services but answers here sound a bit as if people used it as a VpN replacement.

          If I do not want to expose local services but only protect me and hide from untrusted WiFi, would I better use a traditional VPN or Tailscale?

          My thinking is that Tailscale could be the better VPN because they have a clean business model while pure VPN companies are all shady.

          • __jonas 21 minutes ago
            > In my mind Tailscale was primarily to expose local services

            You might be thinking of tailscale funnel:

            https://tailscale.com/kb/1223/funnel

            Which is nice, but still a beta feature. Tailscale itself is indeed a mesh VPN that lets you connect all your devices together.

            > If I do not want to expose local services but only protect me and hide from untrusted WiFi, would I better use a traditional VPN or Tailscale?

            It does NOT by default route all your internet traffic through one of its servers in order to hide it from your ISP, like the type of VPN you might be thinking of (Mullvad, ProtonVPN etc.).

            Though you CAN make it route all the traffic from one of your devices through another, which they call an 'Exit Node'. They also have an integration with Mullvad, which allows you to use Mullvad servers as an exit node. Doing that would be identical to just using Mullvad though.

          • barrkel 47 minutes ago
            Tailscale can tunnel all your traffic through a chosen exit node so you browse the web and whatnot as if you were at home (or wherever the exit node is), so in this way it's a bit like a VPN from a VPN company, but it doesn't give you a list of countries to select from.

            VPN companies aren't really in the business of selling VPNs. They sell proxies, especially proxies that let you appear to come from some country, and you typically connect to the proxy using the VPN functionality (particularly if you're using a consumer device instead of a laptop), but often you can use SOCKS5 instead.

            Tailscale isn't in the business of selling proxies.

          • hhh 2 hours ago
            Tailscale is an enterprise vpn, connecting multiple of your networks, where as consumer vpns just make your network traffic exit from their network.

            I run a tailscale exit node on an anonymous vps provider to give me a similar experience to a consumer vpn.

        • PeterStuer 4 hours ago
          A system by wich you can expose things on your private network (e.g. your home lan) so you can selectively and securely make them accesible from other places (e.g. over the Internet). You can do all this without tailscale by just configuring secure encrypted tunnels (wireshark, traefic, ...) yourself, but services like tailscale provide you with easy gui configuration for that.

          I personally use Pangolin, which is similar https://github.com/fosrl/pangolin

        • remco_sch 4 hours ago
          It's a virtual network switch/router with DHCP, DNS, and lots more enterprisey features on top. You 'plug' devices into it using a VPN connection.
        • Lammy 4 hours ago
          It's a cryptographic key exchange system that allows nodes to open Wireguard tunnels between each other. They have a nice product, but I don't like how it spies on your “private” network by default: https://tailscale.com/kb/1011/log-mesh-traffic

          If you want to self-host, use NetBird instead.

        • frio 5 hours ago
          You don't need to get too far down the page to see "VPN", which is what it is. But on top of that primitive, it's also a bunch of software and networking niceties.
        • davnicwil 3 hours ago
          they have an excellent set of short intro videos [0] on youtube, that's what I used to get an overview and get set up.

          [0] https://youtu.be/sPdvyR7bLqI?si=2kIpHtNuJ52jEdmm

        • npodbielski 4 hours ago
          It just virtual private network.
        • tomjen3 3 hours ago
          It’s a point to point vpn that works between devices even without a direct network connection.

          Their personal free plan is more than enough.

      • echelon 6 hours ago
        These are neat in that you can jump on and extend existing wifi infra, but it'd be nice if they also included 5G. I want a product that does both.

        It's cool to have your own network in a hotel. But it'd be nice to be able to do that on the road, away from public wifi, internationally, whenever - which hotspots do. But at the same time, it'd be nice to be able to do the WiFi thing too to cut back on data usage. I frequently blow through my hotspot data.

        I'd rather this be in one device instead of two. Beggars can't be choosers, though, I suppose?

        • sokoloff 5 hours ago
          I’m using a GLinet GL-XE3000 for that and it’s great. Initial setup of the 5G eSIM on a physical SIM took a little searching but it’s been rock solid and having consistent access on the road and hotels has been great for family travel. It has a built-in battery, but I’ve never really tested the duration (I suspect it’s 3-6 hours) as I put it on its AC adapter in the hotel and the n a cigarette lighter adapter in the car, so the battery gets used 15-45 minutes at a time to bridge between those two places.

          I like it enough that I might buy a second, more compact unit for when space is more a premium, but I’ve been really happy with this one.

    • cosmosgenius 10 hours ago
      Is this any better than just doing Hotspot with wifi bridge? I just have my hotspot on my pixel for my devices to connect to. Pixel itself is connected to whatever "public wifi" is there.
      • PeterStuer 4 hours ago
        Your hotspot just makes the untrusted hotel wifi available via your phone wifi. The networks between your computer and your target services can still inspect and alter your data. Tailscale, or more specifically the Wireshark underneat, sets up an encrypted tunnel so those "untrusted" intermediate networks can't do that.
        • aembleton 3 hours ago
          If my phone has a VPN to my home server, then it should all be encrypted.
          • SXX 3 hours ago
            Yes, but it wont work for sharing mobile internet because VPN doee not apply to tethering unless you have root. On Android there is also WiFi direct, but it's not very reliable and require proxy / not work for everything.
      • gruez 9 hours ago
        Does that actually work? I don't think you can both have hotspot on and be connected to another network.
        • esperent 6 hours ago
          Most newer (or at least new + expensive) phones can share their wifi connection via hotspot. 2.4gh only though I think.
          • mi_lk 5 hours ago
            Do you know what’s the technical term to search if a phone has that capability? Asking for an iPhone
            • einarfd 3 hours ago
              My iPhone calls it personal hotspot.
            • eyeris 5 hours ago
              Like WiFi tethering?
          • user_7832 4 hours ago
            Not only new and expensive, my 5 year old budget phone could do it (a vivo).
        • panarky 8 hours ago
          Yes, it has actually worked starting with the Pixel 3.

          It's called Dual-Band Simultaneous or "STA+AP" (Station + Access Point) concurrency that can bridge an existing wifi connection to an access point to other devices via a hotspot.

        • dorfsmay 7 hours ago
          Yes it works. Now you can also tether via USB. Both of them have worked flawlessly for me recently.
        • Doohickey-d 7 hours ago
          It seems to be only on certain devices feature(?): on my Pixel it worked, Samsung phone just says "sorry, can't do that".
        • muppetman 5 hours ago
          Works fine, yup.
    • hakfoo 7 hours ago
      I'm not using it for travel, but I got a GL-BE3600 recently and it's surprisingly decent as a home router for my very specific needs.

      I wired the desktop PCs in the house, so the only Wi-Fi users are mobiles, a smart TV, and a laptop. Everything else is already hanging off 2.5G wired switches. Pretty light duty, and I just wanted something that would provide robust routing and placeholder Wi-Fi. This does exactly that, and since it's OpenWRT based, it's probably marginally less terrible than whatever TP-Link was offering in the same price range.

      It does run annoyingly hot, but I should just buy a little USB desk fan and point it at the router :P

      • amluto 7 hours ago
        I've had very impressive success running upstream OpenWRT on TP-Link hardware: I have Archer C7 access points running with literally years of uptime.

        That being said, for any new application, I suggest using at least an 802.11ax AP, because cheap 2.4GHz devices that support 802.11ax are becoming common and using an 802.11ac router means that your 2.4GHz devices will be stuck with 802.11n, which is quite a bit less efficient. Even if you don't need any appreciable speed, it's preferable to use a more efficient protocol that uses less airtime.

      • georgebcrawford 6 hours ago
        I have the same router as the OP article - it ran at 72C until I did [this](https://phasefactor.dev/2024/01/15/glinet-fan.html#choosing-...). Currently running at 60C!
    • kleinsch 11 hours ago
      Huge plus one. Useful to bridge hotel wifi so all my devices connect automatically, also useful as an ad-hoc router that fits into my travel pack.
    • kstrauser 11 hours ago
      Heartily seconded! A friend recommended I get one and now I push all my other technical friends to buy one, too.

      My wife and I traveled a bit this year and it was great having all our gadgets connecting to a single AP under our control. It’s easily paid for itself by avoiding ludicrous per-device daily charges.

      • windexh8er 11 hours ago
        I think most travel APs can generally do this, but the feature that makes GL.iNet products popular is: extensibility. I'm not sure why this is so hard to understand for manufacturers, but making products useful via extensibility is a sure fire way to open your target market directly up to prosumers. And those are the buyers that will find you.

        I own two of their products, one of them I bought in 2019 and can still run what I need to on it.

        • xgbi 5 hours ago
          My wife’s work WiFi is handled by a gl.inet 150 (https://www.gl-inet.com/products/gl-ar150/) which is tucked behind her desk since at least 2019. Vanilla openwrt on it, provides WiFi from an Ethernet slot in the wall.

          Uptime is in years, it’s invisible and chugs along without visible power draw. All her devices connect to it, including her Cisco voip phone. It autossh to my ovh server with remote port forward for remote admin. Cost me 15€ in 2016.

          • TeMPOraL 4 hours ago
            >> I'm not sure why this is so hard to understand for manufacturers

            > My wife’s work WiFi is handled by a gl.inet 150 (...) since at least 2019. All her devices connect to it (...) Cost me 15€ in 2016.

            I think this answers GP's question as (yet another) solid reason why manufacturers "can't understand" prosumer needs - it's because targeting prosumers, or generally making products that "just works", is very bad for sales down the line.

          • copperx 4 hours ago
            Isn't this considered to be "shadow IT"? and some enterprise networking devices have automated detection for such setups, I believe (?)
            • ssl-3 2 hours ago
              Maybe, maybe not.

              Some companies aren't very big, and neither are their budgets. And of course, it might be said that there is no solution more permanent than a temporary one.

              We've got a large-ish color laser printer (IIRC, an HP 4600) at one of our locations. It's not a big place; it has only had as many as 3 people working there regularly and has been normally staffed by exactly 1 person for the last several years.

              When we moved into that building, a missing link was noticed: The printer did not feature wifi, and there was no way to get a clean ethernet drop to it without visible external conduit. The boss man didn't like the idea of conduit.

              To get it working for now, I went over to Wal-Mart and bought whatever the current rev of Linksys WRT54G was. I put some iteration of Tomato on it so it could operate in station mode and graft the printer into the wifi network.

              I plugged that blue Linksys box in back in 2007; it turned 18 years old this year.

              It's pretty little slow by modern wifi standards, and the 2.4GHz band is much more congested than it used to be, but: It still works, and nobody seems motivated to spend money to implement a better solution... so it remains.

            • xgbi 3 hours ago
              She's her own boss and shares her office space with 4 other people in medical space, no shadow IT there.

              Since her desk is far from the internet router, I added this little guy for her to have less cables and allow more connectivity.

        • WhyNotHugo 5 hours ago
          Readers of HN will value flexibility and extensibility, but the other 99% of the folks there are fine with totally locked-down devices because it’s the only thing they know of. The lack of extensibility likely doesn’t affect sales/profit in any significant proportion.
      • dzhiurgis 10 hours ago
        Where do you travel that you need wifi?

        I’ve been getting SIM cards for over a decade, now even eSIMs are cheap enough for casual use.

        • kstrauser 10 hours ago
          I can’t put a SIM in my ereader or Switch or iPad.
        • lostlogin 9 hours ago
          Changing countries a lot reduces this option a bit.

          I’m sure I could find a good all Europe card, but I need my number for work calls.

          • cycomanic 8 hours ago
            In Europe you have free roaming so it (almost?) never makes sense to get a new sim per country.
            • systemtest 5 hours ago
              You have roaming but sometimes it’s less data than at home. And you can’t use it for months on end. I have multiple sims from various EU countries. When I visit I top up.
            • deanc 7 hours ago
              To be clear. Within the EU. Not Europe.
              • normie3000 7 hours ago
                EEA, not EU. I had to check as I thought UK was also included. Seems like they left?
                • vidarh 3 hours ago
                  UK is not included, but most UK mobile networks have chosen to pretend the UK hasn't to their customers, and offer similar amounts of voice and data in the EEA, so it still mostly works "one way".
                  • amaccuish 2 hours ago
                    I think it's the other way around? Most UK networks seem to charge charge now (the big ones anyway, EE, Vodafone etc.).

                    At least in Germany, none of our networks do.

        • renewiltord 5 hours ago
          Convenient to connect all devices to one WiFi. E.g. baby camera is on same WiFi as laptop etc.
    • hnburnsy 10 hours ago
      Have you tried hooking it up to an Ethernet port in a hotel room like the one that the TV uses?
      • avidiax 7 hours ago
        This rarely works. The TV network is usually access controlled, so you either won't get an IP or you simply won't have internet access.

        Some hotel rooms (particularly older business hotels) will have an ethernet port for the guest. These work maybe 50% of the time these days. Sometimes you can find a Ruckus AP in your room at outlet level, and these usually have several ethernet ports on the bottom. These also have a working port around 30% of the time.

        So, TL;DR: various ethernet ports in hotel rooms work less than half the time these days.

        • fastcall 6 hours ago
          How’s that access control handled? Very easy to spoof the MAC of the TV or setup some SNI spoofing proxy server, NGFWs with TLS Active Probing are probably harder to deal with but do hotels really have that?
          • SomeUserName432 6 hours ago
            > Very easy to spoof the MAC of the TV or setup some SNI spoofing proxy server

            At that point you're in the 0.1% that the hotel does not really need to worry about. The other >99% will still need to pay for wifi.

            • danw1979 5 hours ago
              it’s probably >0.1% here …
      • wateralien 4 hours ago
        I've had success hooking it up to some Ethernet cables in hotels, but it's 50/50.
    • password4321 9 hours ago
      I could never figure out which gl-inet to get, since some of the newer products seemed less powerful than older ones depending on the product family or something...
    • copperx 4 hours ago
      Do you mind expounding on how it has saved you? I'd love to know the practical use cases.
      • wateralien 4 hours ago
        While on a scuba diving trip in Thailand a couple months ago we could position the router slightly outside our hotel room to be able to be able to strongly connect to the very dodgy hotel wifi so my girlfriend could do her work calls.

        It would also automatically log into the captive wifi which seemed to require a login every hour or so.

        Another time we Ethernet into it using the cable in another hotel to bypass some ridiculous speed limitations on their access point.

        I'm considering getting their model which can take SIM cards, so that we can also failover to mobile networks wherever we are.

    • theoreticalmal 11 hours ago
      What is the benefit of this over, for example, an iPhone hotspot?
      • neither_color 11 hours ago
        Run one wireguard server in your home and one client instance on this router and now all of your devices can share the same residential VPN connection. No fraud blocks or extra verifications from your banking apps, no million suspicious login detected from all your social accounts, use your home netflix account, etc. All without your individual devices running a VPN app.
        • drnick1 10 hours ago
          > Run one wireguard server in your home and one client instance on this router and now all of your devices can share the same residential VPN connection.

          You don't need a "travel router" for this. My phone is permanently connected to my server via Wireguard (so that I can access my files from anywhere). Adding another device just requires adding a peer in the server's config file and can be accomplished very quickly. It's not clear what problem the travel router solves, unless perhaps you travel with dozens of devices.

          > no million suspicious login detected from all your social accounts,

          I can personally do without those.

          • vidarh 3 hours ago
            Your comment explains why we want a travel router. I have a wire guard setup for my servers. I'm entirely comfortable with setting that up.

            But I value my time enough that I don't want the hassle of that for the various devices my family uses when I can just preconfigure and plug in a tiny device and not have them depend on me being in the same location all the time.

          • tstrimple 10 hours ago
            I can accomplish this via one access point instead of configuring wireguard on N*5 family devices.
            • gradstudent 7 hours ago
              Why do you need to config wireguard on each device? Connect your phone to your vpn and share the wifi. Works on my android. Struggling to see the value proposition for this device.
              • sandmn 5 hours ago
                Does it require specific VPN apps or root? I tried connecting laptop to phone hotspot and even though phone was connected to VPN, laptop wasn't.
              • valzam 6 hours ago
                Do you have a pixel? On Samsung you cannot share WiFi, Hotspot only works with mobile connections. I learners above that this is possible with pixel phones, makes me want to get one...
                • asymmetric 4 hours ago
                  Same with iPhone, you can only share mobile connection.
              • adammarples 1 hour ago
                So now your phone is a hot spot for your family and you can't leave the hotel room or go 2 hours without charging it?
          • cheeze 7 hours ago
            > Adding another device just requires adding a peer in the server's config file and can be accomplished very quickly

            Do you need a client to be running on each device?

            Even regardless "I just need to edit a config file real quick" is... Way more work than I want to do. Works for someone on hn but I'm imagining trying to show my dad how to do that.

            That's the benefit of a travel router.

      • WillPostForFood 11 hours ago
        An iPhone can't bridge a wifi network. So you need something like a travel router to share a wifi connection.
        • rtkwe 8 hours ago
          They're suggesting just running off your data plan which works for domestic travel (at least to urban areas with good cell service) and can work for international if you go through getting a data eSim.
      • davedigerati 9 hours ago
        chromecast - godsend on long hotel stays. need to dial in through my home (wireguard) so no license issues with streamers and once I connect my GL.iNet GL-MT300N-V2 to hotel wifi instant bubble of safe wifi for all my devices! weighs nothing, been using for 8 years rock solid.
      • WhyNotHugo 5 hours ago
        If you’re using a VPN: iPhone won’t route hotspot clients over the VPN, so you need to set up VPN on all clients.
      • trelane 11 hours ago
        You can control it from the ground up, including installing alternate firmware. You can also use VPNs etc.
      • renewiltord 5 hours ago
        Husband can go pick up food order and baby cam still accessible from wife’s phone.
    • upcoming-sesame 9 hours ago
      How do you handle captive portals in hotels ?
      • jtokoph 9 hours ago
        Usually you connect your laptop/phone to the portable router network, which then just pulls up the captive portal. Once you auth from one device, any device behind the router is authed with the portal. This is because the hotel network just sees your router's IP/MAC.
      • mmerickel 9 hours ago
        Connect on your phone or other device. Connect to travel router. Clone the mac address of your device. Connect router to wifi. Adjust device to not auto login. Good to go.
        • figmert 8 hours ago
          GL.iNet routers don't even need this. It has an option to pass through captive portals. So you connect to your GL.iNet AP, then you set it up for the hotel WiFi, tick the option for passing through (it essentially disables VPN, AdGuard Home and other things if enabled), it will then link you to the captive portal where you can log in as you would otherwise.

          Once the internet is active, the GL.iNet router will then re-enable things like VPN and AdGuard Home.

          Since these devices are OpenWrt underneath with a pretier ui, I presume this is all possible on any OpenWrt device.

        • dalanmiller 9 hours ago
          Is this an annoying amount of steps? And do you have to do this on every expiry of your session on the portal?
    • hshdhdhj4444 8 hours ago
      What advantage does this have over the cheaper UniFi router in the OP?
      • threatofrain 8 hours ago
        The Beryl AX is going for cheaper ($70) on Amazon right now vs the UniFi Travel Router ($80). Better bang for the buck on both hardware and software without needing specific Ubiquiti anything.
      • SturgeonsLaw 8 hours ago
        The UniFi router depends on you already having a UniFi environment. If you do, it's a good option, but the GL would work with any heterogeneous network
      • fragmede 8 hours ago
        It's available right now, for one.
    • ei8ths 10 hours ago
      these are awesome, i just take my old wifi router tp-link, its big though. I might have to get one of these little guys.
    • matt-attack 10 hours ago
      What’s the use case exactly?
      • raw_anon_1111 10 hours ago
        I have this.

        TP-Link AC750

        https://a.co/d/esxrRA4

        When you are some place with a captive network and want to use devices that don’t have a browser. You connect the router to the WiFi network that has internet access and you connect the other WiFi network to a device with a browser like your phone. Every device looks like one device to the captive network and you can use them all.

        Second use case, I now live in a place with a shared internet access that is shared between all of the units. Anyone can broadcast to and control our Roku device and there is no way to block it from the Roku.

        We create a private network with the router

      • tstrimple 10 hours ago
        One is actually usable wifi at hotels with ethernet cables available. I don't use that device, but a DIY version that also acts as a portable media server while traveling. We can tunnel back to our home network, but often stay places with very bad reception and or internet access. Also helps keep the kids entertained on longer road trips. They can connect their devices to the router as we travel and have full access to the cached media.
    • te_chris 6 hours ago
      Yes these are the way. Use them to get cheap anker security cams to work as baby monitors while we’re in hotel rooms
    • tomjen3 3 hours ago
      I am apparently dumb. What benefit does this give you, other than a segregated network? Do us hotels typically have exposed Ethernet ports?
      • eliseumds 3 hours ago
        I always travel with my GL.iNet GL-MT3000 (Beryl AX) and this is what I use it for:

        - My wife and I travel with multiple devices (laptops, phones, Chromecast...) and when we get to a hotel/Airbnb, I simply connect my Beryl AX to their network (it deals with captive portals btw) and all of our devices automatically connect.

        - I changed the `/etc/hosts` directly in the router, meaning I can test my local servers under custom domains easily on my other devices like phones/tablets without apps like SquidMan.

        - I route specific domains through specific VPNs. Government websites, streaming websites, AWS services, etc.

        - I can plug in a 4G USB modem into it and it can automatically fallback to it if the main connection drops.

        - It has built-in Tailscale support.

  • bnc319 11 hours ago
    So… hear me out. Could I connect this to an airline’s paid in-flight WiFi network, and then broadcast an open network to effectively open up access to all other passengers for free? If enough WiFi pirates do this on flights perhaps it would kill paid WiFi entirely (just need enough Good Samaritans)

    (And yes I know there are other bypasses you can do like spoofing MAC addresses to get around some device count restrictions)

    • qmr 8 hours ago
      Really what you should be doing is setting the SSID to "$2 in flight WiFi!" and selling access.

      You'll make tens of ... dollars every flight.

      • redrove 6 hours ago
        • omnimus 4 hours ago
          Ok Lol but they got arrested for stealing others people data not for making a wifi on the flight. That's different.
          • redrove 3 hours ago
            >That's different.

            Is it though? It genuinely looks like you might get caught doing this, and I'm sure you are at least breaking airline policy, even if you're not charging money; not to mention if you charge.

      • ec109685 6 hours ago
        Airlines throttle per device, unfortunately.
        • supersparrow 4 hours ago
          These travel routers have an option to impersonate the device you are using to get round this.
          • akerl_ 1 hour ago
            The throttling is "per device", not "per type of device". If you connect 1 travel router and use it to share internet with >1 user, those users are sharing the capped capacity the plane gives to "one connected device".
    • raw_anon_1111 10 hours ago
      That’s not going to be an issue at all domestically soon unless you fly one of the cheapest airlines.

      Delta has had free WiFi for awhile now as does JetBlue and I believe Southwest. It’s coming soon to AA and United.

      I fly Delta 99% of the time.

      • xp84 7 hours ago
        “Soon”? Why would they give up that money though? I feel like there’s so little competition they aren’t feeling the pressure. Otherwise everyone else would have been hurting 15+ years ago when JetBlue started their free Wi-Fi.
        • niklasrde 4 hours ago
          Why? Because Starlink. Starlink requires airlines to offer it for free (apparently, for now), and the airlines that have started offering it are making a big deal out of it because it's actually usable compared to a lot of the LEO- or ground-based offerings before.

          United was looking to have its regional fleet done by end of this week, Qatar has finished their 777s; Hawaiian's entire fleet is done, so is airBaltic's. WestJet are also close.

          British Airways is starting the rollout now, so are SAS, Air France and a few others.

          • antonkochubey 10 minutes ago
            >Starlink requires airlines to offer it for free

            What's the catch?

        • tylervigen 6 hours ago
          Delta and America already are offering free wi-fi on most domestic routes.
      • a_t48 7 hours ago
        Just got back from several flights with Hawaiian, free Starlink on every one.
    • gdw2 10 hours ago
      Android phones can share their wifi connection like this.
      • pityJuke 8 hours ago
        Insane to me that Apple still does not support this.
        • xp84 7 hours ago
          Not that surprising. Unless you’re going to sell access to that hotspot and give Apple a 30% cut, it really wouldn’t interest Tim Cook.
      • Doohickey-d 7 hours ago
        (some android phones: my Pixel can, Samsung can't, although it seems that other Samsungs do have it.)
        • niklasrde 4 hours ago
          I installed another app on my S10 to enable this. It's called "Wi-Fi Hotspot" and it works pretty well
      • jser 9 hours ago
        I carry a burner Android just for this feature. Great for sharing with my iPhone and iPad on a flight.
    • zenonu 7 hours ago
      Playing with fire. It could be potentially construed as an attempt to steal personal info.
    • ec109685 6 hours ago
      I’ve done this. Works fine. Issue in general is the airlines throttle the heck out of devices.
    • IncreasePosts 11 hours ago
      Maybe. And then get throttled or banned for using too much bandwidth. You don't need this product to do this though, you can do the same thing with a laptop and your phone
    • FL410 9 hours ago
      Probably. I do this with a GLinet and it works great.
    • system2 7 hours ago
      Flight internet usually comes with a data quota.
    • akerl_ 9 hours ago
      Why would this kill paid wifi? A bunch of airlines are already switching to free wifi anyways, but the ones that aren't seem unlikely to just kick back as an army of easily-identifiable tech bros attempt to defraud them. It's a bit like trying to steal money from the bank after you've handed them your ID and debit card.
  • FrameworkFred 9 hours ago
    To all the commenters who asked if it's worth it? IMO it's super worth it if you have more than one wifi access point and it gets more and more worth it as your network gets more complicated.

    I upgraded to homogenous ubiquiti/unifi when I set up a point to multi-point on my farm because I thought it would make that part easier. Surprisingly, those links aren't really baked in to the rest of it, but the router and wifi antennas that I've installed around those links "just work" with a private, protected, and guest network.

    I used to have to update two different routers with the same SSID, username and password to make "hopping" from one to the next "seamless" and, now that I've got 8 wifi antennas in a mesh with a single UI to configure them all, I can't even imagine how I'd do it with the hodge-podge of gear I used to work with.

    And I'm probably going to buy a travel router, but I'm wondering, if I use it connect to the hotel wifi, will I be able to use the thing as a wifi hotspot as well or do I have to use an ethernet point because the wifi is "taken"?

    • nixgeek 6 hours ago
      You can connect a UTR to the hotel network, and also connect your devices via WiFi to it; works just like GL.iNet's Slate 7 in this regard.
  • barrkel 58 minutes ago
    Tailscale? (I don't think it does)

    WAN connectivity via USB tethering and ethernet, not just wifi?

    The blog has almost no details, but the product page is also pretty light on technical details.

    The competition (I use GL-MT3000) is pretty strong.

    • dzikimarian 44 minutes ago
      It makes more sense if you are used to Ubiquiti ecosystem. Basically they assume you have Ubiquiti-based home/office network (they call it site). Then this device binds to this site and VPNs to it over Teleport (kinda similar thing to Tailscale, also built on top of wireguard). I would assume you can also configure Wireguard/Open VPN/IPsec manually as this is pretty standard in their ecosystem.

      I guess it's nice if you are in Ubiquiti ecosystem already and want as little friction as possible. Otherwise it's probably similar to any travel router.

  • matt-p 2 hours ago
    I never really understand why you'd rather have one of these over just enabling "hotspot" on your phone. Ethernet is the only reason I can think of
    • barrkel 44 minutes ago
      What if you want your kid(s) and/or partner(s) to stay connected after you leave the hotel room with your phone?

      What if you want to use the hotel's internet connection instead of your roaming data?

      What if you want to use wireguard or tailscale to funnel all traffic through your home network?

      What if you want to enable your family's devices to connect to your self-hosted services?

      • apexalpha 7 minutes ago
        1. Fair enough.

        2. Most Android phones can do this.

        3. Android phones can do this.

        4. This is just the same question as 3.

    • stavros 1 hour ago
      If you have an Android phone you can connect a USB-C to Ethernet dongle (the same one as you have for your laptop) and get tethering via Ethernet out of it. It works really well.
    • chrisan 1 hour ago
      we take a webcam to keep eye on dogs sometimes. I use a travel router for that
  • cromka 12 hours ago
    This is brilliant, actually very innovative product by Unifi. It's interesting because it seems they do what Apple does: they can add new products and features only because all the devices work together in an ecosystem.
    • 8fingerlouie 12 hours ago
      They were founded by ex Apple employees, so there's that.
    • libeclipse 12 hours ago
      Innovative how? Many travel routers already exist and support similar features
      • cromka 12 hours ago
        The way it automatically connects to your home and presents to your devices as part of your home WiFi. So you bring that device with you and everything else works like you're back home.

        I use OPNSense and OpenWRT myself and there's no way you can make travel routers this convenient with them.

        • varenc 10 hours ago
          Tailscale running in subnet router mode on a GL.iNet router comes close. You can setup Tailscale through the GL.iNet GUI but to have it also route traffic for everything over to your Tailnet you need to flip one setting via an ssh command.

          Not as convenient as this travel router sounds though, but comes close-ish for techies. (wish it didn't require that tweak via SSH. Maybe it'll be added)

          • ec109685 5 hours ago
            Something something dropbox is simple :) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9224

            I wish Eero offered this feature. I bring three eeros to Airbnb’s to replace their crappy WiFi with my same SID, but it would be nice if it connected back through the home internet.

        • vistu 5 hours ago
          Although it does sound really nice from a user experience perspective I'm really hesitant with carrying a device with me that without any (additional) authentication would gain access to my home network wherever you plug it in. Would hate losing it or have it be taken from me.
        • cycomanic 11 hours ago
          Why do you think this would be difficult to do using openwrt? Wouldn't you just set up the travel router to have the same ssid and password as your home network and configure a wireguard tunnel from the travel router to your home network (that is if you want to be in your home network)
          • anon7000 10 hours ago
            Because manually configuring wireguard tunnels on random devices is a simple task for most people lol. Unifi’s whole stack is all about making powerful tools easier to use for people who don’t want to fuck around with networking.
            • devilbunny 10 hours ago
              Agreed. I use Tailscale (which the gl.inet devices support, because they're basically a pretty front end for OpenWRT, and it supports Tailscale) for my stuff, because I can do it and it's not a real pain to do, but you do have to know a bit at least about networking. This thing looks extremely promising for the "I know this should be possible and I want to do it but have no idea how" level of knowledge as well as the "I want to spend as little time as possible on configuring things" people.
            • cycomanic 8 hours ago
              But you don't need to configure wireguard on the individual devices just on the openwrt router. That's one device and you can keep that on permanently.
              • throwawaysoxjje 5 hours ago
                Except that sometimes you can’t. I don’t know if the Unifi router checks for this, but I’ve run into more than one network where the VPN conflicted with either the captive portal or the wireless network itself (and at least one in the DFW Admiral’s club that had draconian blocking)
        • walterbell 12 hours ago
          > presents to your devices as part of your home WiFi

          That will be fun for browser geolocation based on WiFi name.

          • shermantanktop 11 hours ago
            In a 1 bit environment (==single SSID visible), sure. But most of the time multiple SSIDs are visible, and correlate to each, making detection of abnormalities easier. And the lat/long is also visible to help disambiguate.
            • gruez 9 hours ago
              I think OP meant the opposite issue of broadcasting "I live at 123 evergreen terrace" everywhere you go, because SSIDs are vaguely unique.
            • walterbell 11 hours ago
              Would both the stationary and mobile instances of that SSID be visible on public databases like https://wigle.net?
          • lostlogin 9 hours ago
            You’ve reminded me of a project I started and never got it working. A home network on a vpn to another location.

            So the usually ssid is in my home country, and another ssid is based somewhere else geographically.

        • Onavo 7 hours ago
          It probably needs a panic/border mode to disable all home access in the event of an emergency. You don't want to be crossing borders and give customs officials full access to your home network.
          • system2 5 hours ago
            If you disable your password saving, I think it would prevent them somehow.
  • makestuff 12 hours ago
    It seems like the main feature is being able to access your home network to watch netflix, access LAN devices, etc.

    How is this different compared to running a tailscale exit node in your home network?

    Is the benefit of this that you have a hardware device that you can connect to instead of needing software like tailscale?

    • slig 12 hours ago
      I have a hard time believing anyone would actually use this versus self-hosting headscale in a discarded ThinkCentre and running it from a closet.
      • nickt 12 hours ago
        Not sure if you’re serious but reeks of “you can already build such a system yourself quite trivially”
      • tonypapousek 11 hours ago
        I’m in the market for a solid travel router, and my home network is all Unifi gear. This is a no brainer, especially with the built-in Teleport support.
      • dangus 11 hours ago
        I run OpnSense, Wireguard, hooked up to third party WiFi access points, and I had to do a lot of configuration and work that I wouldn't have had to do if I had just bought Ubiquiti equipment.

        I did save money, a really significant amount of money.

        Obviously, yes, I am capable of going through the work that eliminates my need for this product. I have no trouble configuring Wireguard and setting it up on my client devices and running through all that.

        But it was a lot of work to get to this point and I had to spend a lot of time learning how to do that, even as a person who is already technical. Wireguard in particular took me a solid half a day to build understanding and get it configured.

        If I was a little bit richer and I went back in time I'd probably just buy all Unifi. Actually if I went back in time I think with my same levels of wealth I'd probably just buy Unifi and save some precious time.

        This specific device does seem like a really nice extension of their product line.

    • __float 12 hours ago
      I think so: it looks like "UniFi Teleport" is also based on Wireguard.

      You can also do this with a travel router like one of GL.iNet's and Tailscale subnet routers.

      • dawnerd 8 hours ago
        UniFi teleport is also very buggy with frequent disconnects. Tailscale and WireGuard proper don’t have those issues for me.
    • lucb1e 12 hours ago
      How would Tailscale run in your home network without a hardware device to connect to?
      • AJRF 12 hours ago
        You can create a subnet router on tailscale and access any device on your local network, regardless of them having tailscale installed
        • ohyoutravel 7 minutes ago
          Sure but you need a device on the local network to run Tailscale so it routes to that subnet no?
      • elteto 12 hours ago
        Not to take away from this device, I think it’s pretty neat. But you can run tailscale on anything, even Apple TVs. If you have a Unifi network odds are that you have at least one spare computing device that can run tailscale.
        • atonse 11 hours ago
          Problem is that I think my Apple TV goes into some sort of deep idle mode where tailscale stops working. So it’s been effectively useless for me when I travel.
          • dewey 20 minutes ago
            Never had that, and I use that feature often.
  • saagarjha 11 hours ago
    • nerdix 11 hours ago
      Wifi 5 for an $80 router in 2026 (I mean we're almost there) is pretty disappointing. I get that its mostly going to be used on crappy hotel networks and the crappy hotel network will often be the bottleneck but $80 looks to be roughly twice the price of the typical travel wifi 5 travel router, about equal to the price of a typical wifi 6 travel router, and only $30-40 cheaper than a typical wifi 7 travel router.

      I don't mind a unifi premium for the integration but they should at least have a $50 wifi 5 version and a $100 wifi 6 "pro" version

      • novok 11 hours ago
        I'd pay $30 for the software alone that actually works.
      • elAhmo 2 hours ago
        Is there really much difference between Wifi 5, 6, 7, especially when travelling given relatively limited speeds you might find yourself in?

        I don't even know what is my Wifi "version" at none of the places I have my routers, things just work for all purposes (work, gaming, streaming).

      • milch 5 hours ago
        I don't think they necessarily compete for the same market as some of these other routers. This seems way more compact than many of the other options on the market. I just briefly looked around on Amazon and even many other wifi 5 routers look to be about 2x or thicker than this one. Compared to the GL.inet Opal for example, it's about 20mm smaller in each dimension: 118 x 85 x 30mm (Opal) vs. 95.95 x 65 x 12.5 mm (Unifi). The Unifi is pretty close to a tiny 5000 mAh portable battery.

        Now what I'd be really more interested in a Pro version, more so than wifi 6, would be a built-in modem with SIM/eSIM.

      • hmottestad 6 hours ago
        I didn’t think there was much point in WiFi 6 unless you go 6e and get the 6Ghz frequency?
      • j45 7 hours ago
        It’s wifi 5 but the most interesting part is it uses 5w of power max, I thought it’d be more.
    • IncreasePosts 10 hours ago
      Based on unifis release schedule that means may 2026
  • Brajeshwar 3 hours ago
    This is brilliant, especially if you are already invested in the Ubiquiti/UniFi Ecosystem. There was a UniFi Teleport, and I think that function is now part of this Travel Router. From the video and the images, I believe this can also be added to a car act as a family wi-fi on the move.

    I’ve always had a Pocket Travel Router (along with a thin but long enough RJ45 cable) with me while traveling, starting with the D-Link AC750 Travel Router. It does away with Wi-Fi Change, and all of your devices just continue to work, no worry about syncing, file-transfers, etc. A travel router becomes even more convenient when traveling with the family.

  • syntaxing 12 hours ago
    I really like “bring your home everywhere aspect”. I can be a pain connecting my whole family devices to another SSID. If it can do WiFi repeating (as in login to a single hotel account and stream to rest of device), I would absolutely get one. If not, GL inet is still the way to go
    • notyourwork 11 hours ago
      Can GL inet not do that? Genuinely asking.
      • teeray 11 hours ago
        Can confirm. It also has a mode to jump through the captive portal. I just set it up with the same SSID and PSK as my home wifi and everything we bring connects automatically. It also routes everything through Tailscale.
        • guiambros 9 hours ago
          Yep, I have the same set up. Use GL router to connect to the hotel wifi, and all devices are automatically connected, without captive portal on each one.

          Added bonus that I can use tailscale on the GL router to route remote traffic through my tailnet -- including devices where I can't install tailscale client (e.g. corp laptop).

      • eps 10 hours ago
        This Unifi device is primarily meant as an add-on to exising Unifi setups as it's all well integrated.
      • tguvot 11 hours ago
        can do it
    • pyrolistical 11 hours ago
      ? You just need to set it up once and devices will auto reconnect by default
    • throwawaysleep 9 hours ago
      GL can absolutely do this already.
  • easyKL 4 hours ago
    Please also consider the GL-iNEt Puli (XE300): - 5V 2A USB C connector and a 5000mAh battery - SIM and [not tested by myself] eSIM support. - Tailscale and Nebula available as a plug-in. - Main network and guest network can be set. - OpenWRT if you want the GL-iNET firmware.
    • jagermo 3 hours ago
      I am running a Netgear Nighthawk when I am on the road. But the Mubi7 looks interesting - I would not want to go back from 5G to a slower networks, sorry :)
  • shmoogy 10 hours ago
    Wonder how this will work to connect into hotel networks - on my glinet I have to clone my iPhone MAC address so I basically have to connect to the WiFi, do the with authentication enter room number and last name, then disconnect and boot up the router.

    Is there a better way to get these connected to a WiFi for relaying where the Ethernet isn't an option?

    • raw_anon_1111 10 hours ago
      A $40 router with WiFi to WiFi bridge support like the TP-Link AC750. You connect the router to the captive network and you connect your phone to the router. Connect everything else to the router.
    • bananadonkey 6 hours ago
      This new Unifi device supports captive portal authentication flows, so you don't need to do that whole shuffle.

      Source https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ruv550at3k8

    • avidiax 7 hours ago
      I have a gl.Inet and it's very rare that I have to do anything special to get on a captive portal. I just connect to the travel router AP, then connect the travel router to the hotel's WiFi, and browse neverssl.com to get the captive portal.
  • DetectDefect 9 hours ago
    Have Ubiquiti/Unifi firmware/devices ever been subject to independent, third-party security testing? Surely a company charging such a premium for high-end devices has invested in such processes and is proud to showcase them ...
    • NoiseBert69 5 hours ago
      As much I love Unifi products I dislike their privacy policy:

      > Usage Data. We may collect certain information about your devices, your network, your system and third party devices connected to your network or system when you use the Services ("Usage Data"), including but not limited to device data, performance data, sensor data, motion data, temperature data, power usage data, device signals, device parameters, device identifiers that may uniquely identify the devices, including mobile devices, web request, Internet Protocol address, location information (including latitude and longitude), browser type, browser language, referring/exit pages and URLs, platform type, the date and time of your request, and one or more cookies, web beacons and JavaScript that may uniquely identify your devices or browser.

      https://www.ui.com/legal/privacypolicy/#c1

    • ec109685 5 hours ago
      You should overlay something else rather than rely on WiFi securiry. Tailscale or a vpn, private cloud or just tls, depending on your threat model.
  • cyberrock 11 hours ago
    I wish one of these devices would have an internal battery again like the old HooToo Tripmates. Using it with a power bank doesn't feel quite the same.
  • JSR_FDED 10 hours ago
    Related, the GLiNet Comet (remote KVM) are also excellent. Have bought one for every elderly family member so I can support them more easily.
    • redrove 6 hours ago
      This would’ve been great 15y ago, but today they all want help on their phone and there’s no good way of doing that.
    • yjftsjthsd-h 8 hours ago
      Oh, that's tempting. Is there vanilla openwrt or any other all-FOSS firmware for it? I'm rather paranoid about this kind of appliance.
    • omnibrain 9 hours ago
      How does it compare to the PiKVM?
      • forbiddenlake 9 hours ago
        Much less expensive (barring diy and print-a-case-yourself), and most importantly to certain people, easily available in the US from Amazon. (Jetkvm also suffers from unclear import costs and delays)
  • firecall 10 hours ago
    >while captive portal logins on hotel networks are handled quietly in the background.

    Anyone know how it automagically sorts out connecting to the hotel WiFi?

    Hotels often want some combination of my room number and surname I've found, or some combination of hotel name and floor password.

    • dingwallr 10 hours ago
      "To connect the UniFi Travel Router to a guest network, open the UniFi Mobile App and select a nearby wireless network. If the network has a captive portal, it will automatically forward to your mobile device for login."

      from the FAQ https://store.ui.com/us/en/products/utr

      • varenc 10 hours ago
        It likely relies on the travel router cloning the MAC address of your phone or whatever you use to authenticate. That way the hotel just thinks the travel router is your phone.
        • dawnerd 8 hours ago
          It’s also (I’d hope) modifying the ttl as that’s used to detect travel routers.
    • MobileVet 9 hours ago
      Took my PS5 Pro on a work trip. Was livid to find out the horrific 'browser' on the PS5 wasn't able to handle the captive portal login page. $700 gaming rig and it can't load a simple HTML page so I can enter my name and room number?! Ridiculous.

      Thought about it for a few minutes and realized that the portal was likely just doing mac filtering. So I adjusted my MacBook Pro's MAC address to be the same as the PS5, went through the portal login and then powered down the MBP. Booted up the PS5 and I was online.

      Damn it feels good to be a gangster.

      • avhception 5 hours ago
        Sometimes it's also possible to simply disconnect the hotel's SIP phone from the Ethernet jack and use that :)
  • qgin 11 hours ago
    > Automatic handling of captive portal authentication

    Very curious about how they're pulling this off

    • varenc 11 hours ago
      Details are scarce right now, but they say that via the UniFi mobile you'll authenticate yourself onto the captive portal and the travel router will use that. Guessing it'll clone your phone's MAC?
  • dawnerd 8 hours ago
    Really wish their press Release / marketing want obviously llm generated.

    Im their target audience for sure but I’m not sure I need all of the same features my home network has. Really my travel router is just used to share a paid connection and run AdGuard network wide.

  • apexalpha 6 hours ago
    Does this also bridge L2 stuff so I am actually on my LAN?

    Otherwise I don't really see the point to carry a specific hotspot device when my phone has one built in.

  • GlenTheMachine 11 hours ago
    I travel internationally all the time. Someone tell me why I need this.
    • ssl-3 8 hours ago
      You don't need this. Strictly speaking, we don't need much.

      But a travel router can be nice to have.

      I bring some tech with me when I travel.

      Obviously a phone, but also a decent-sounding smart speaker with long battery life so I can hear some music of my choosing in decent fidelity without using Bluetooth [bonus: battery-backed alarm clock!], a laptop for computing, a streaming box for plugging into the TV, maybe some manner of SBC to futz with if I'm bored and can't sleep during downtime.

      All of this stuff really wants to have a [wifi] connection to a local area network, like it has when I'm at home.

      A travel router (this one, or something from any other vendor mentioned in these threads, or just about anything that can run openwrt well) solves that problem.

      All I have to do is get the router connected to the Internet however I do that (maybe there's ethernet, decent wifi, or maybe my phone hotspot or USB tethering is the order of the day), and then everything else Just Works as soon as it is unpacked and switched on.

      And it all works togetherly, on my own wireless LAN -- just as those things also work at home.

      Bonus nachos: With some manner of VPN like Tailscale configured in the router, or the automagic stuff this UBNT device is claimed to be able to do, a person can bring their home LAN with them, too -- without individual devices being configured to do that.

      I think travel routers are pretty great, myself.

      (But using Ubiquiti gear makes me feel filthy for reasons that I can't properly articulate, so I stick with things like Latvian-built Mikrotik hardware or something running OpenWRT for my own travel router uses.)

    • thisislife2 5 hours ago
      In my opinion, you only need this if you don't like connecting to unknown (insecure or suspect) network to get access to the internet. Ideally, you would configure this kind of router to connect to a VPN so that as soon as it connects to the internet, it immediately logins to the VPN and reroutes all your network traffic through it. This makes it more difficult for someone to hijack your connection or crack it. From the comments it also appears that some people use it to connect to their home network, either to access their home server or to use as VPN (this can help you get around geo-fence and unnecessary additional authentications that some services require for fraud prevention). Some travel routers can also combine 2 or more internet connections (public WiFi + mobile data) to provide you a more stable internet connection, which is often desirable.
    • novok 11 hours ago
      You have a workplace that insists you are working from your home while you travel.

      It has limits, like the amazon hardware keypress thingy with north korea showed recently, but unless your working at superbigtech or defense contractor it would probably work.

    • aghilmort 10 hours ago
      connect screenless devices, e.g., Echo Dot extend weak wireless range in hotel screen share or network between multiple devices eg travel with two laptops and can virtual KVM only have to do the captive device on one - many hotels limit number of devices extra security buffer phone can't bridge wifi for headless like this etc etc
  • frugalmail 2 hours ago
    It reads "Tethered 5G", why would a high-end travel router not support sim/e-sims directly?!
    • oseityphelysiol 2 hours ago
      79$ is not “high end”. 5G enabled router would cost twice as much - for a feature that not everybody will need.
  • jbverschoor 8 hours ago
    Oh I thought one with 5g cellular connectivity
  • tonymet 11 hours ago
    I clone my home WiFi SSID with my travel router so when we arrive at the hotel all of our devices auto connect without having to configure the consent / captive WiFi screen.

    It’s also nice to control VPN and DNS from one place , in case the hotel is doing DNS or IP filtering.

    And quite a few hotels still offer wired Ethernet , which helps performance.

    • jasoncartwright 2 hours ago
      Hotel wifi is often hilariously slow compared to plugging my travel router into an in-room ethernet socket. From spotty <10mbps to often a full uncontended gigabit.

      Makes video conferencing and large downloads usable.

  • donkeylazy456 8 hours ago
    it says travel but not supporting LTE/5G
  • system2 7 hours ago
    The page doesn't even have a buy button. Why?
    • zer0x4d 7 hours ago
      UniFi website and marketing is just really really bad. They have amazing products but for some reason they don't really care about consumers and don't really know how to market to consumers. Just look at their website, it's impossible to find anything other than some super super specific networking stuff that you probably need a CCNP to even begin to understand
    • jasoncartwright 2 hours ago
      Because it's not available until the 29th
  • fnord77 8 hours ago
    I don't understand this post. Is it an ad?

    I have wireguard running on my home router. Why do I need a piece of hardware when my laptop already can connect to it from anywhere?

    • NoiseBert69 5 hours ago
      I've been to many hotels/apartments where you have to place the router on a very specific location because the Wifi/4G/5G coverage is super bad.

      With Teltonica/GL.Inet you also can use small external antennas. Getting behind windows is often enough.

    • allovertheworld 4 hours ago
      This is for those not aware of that setup lmao
  • baggy_trough 10 hours ago
    I need something like this to share a single wifi connection among devices on a cruise. I don't care about the home network access though. Any recommendations?
  • darkreader 8 hours ago
    [dead]
  • allovertheworld 11 hours ago
    whats the point of this? I got wireguard on my phone connected to my home network (also unifi).

    If this device had a 5g sim slot, then I could see the point but it’s not that.

    • WillPostForFood 11 hours ago
      The main benefit of a travel router is creating a private network, and sharing a wifi connection. An iPhone can't do that, though Android phones can.
      • girishso 6 hours ago
        > though Android phones can

        Interesting, as someone who has always used iPhones, wouldn't mind getting an Android phone for this.

        Is there some app?

        • stuxnet79 2 hours ago
          No it's provided as part of the Android OS. Very simple and intuitive to use and has been for the past 10 years since I started using it. The only thing that was annoying initially was that you couldn't pass through the WiFi that your phone is connected to but I think that was corrected in later versions of Android. For a time I was using one of my older Pixel phones as a WiFi extender to improve signal in my home's basement. Worked like a charm. I'm honestly surprised this isn't available on iOS.
      • allovertheworld 4 hours ago
        Sharing where? All my devices can connect directly thru to Wireguard vpn on my home network. Ipad, iphone, MBP, etc

        A 5g phone tethering to your Wireguard connected MBP beats this out of the water

      • hnburnsy 11 hours ago
        Some third party WiFis limit the number of devices. This gets around that limit.