ChrisP
10
I have been in that scenario too many times. I have a Brume GL-1000MV set up at home with Wireguard Server active, and when I travel I use the Beryl portable router to connect to it. For all purposes, I’m “working from home”. (Also have Frontier Gig plan)
I have a similar instance the ‘other way around’. At the remote location I set up a Raspberry Pi 4 with PiVPN acting as a wireguard and OpenVPN server, simultaneously, and back home I use the same Beryl, this time switching the VPN client profile to the one I need.
Raspberry needs a little more work, as you have to forward ports at the router level, and rely on the no-ip DDNS script to dynamically update the IP, which the ‘Brume’ does on it’s own since it’s ran at the router itself.
Also, if you are only connecting your laptop to the VPN, you really don’t need a router, as you can download wireguard client too
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