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Netgear Unite Pro 4G LTE Mobile WiFi Hotspot - GSM Unlocked

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$53.39

$ 25 .99 $25.99

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About this item

  • This refurbished product is tested and certified to work properly. The product will have minor blemishes and/or light scratches. The refurbishing process includes functionality testing, basic cleaning, inspection, and repackaging. The product ships with all relevant accessories, and may arrive in a generic box.


AT&T Unite Pro is the ultimate mobile WiFi solution with unmatched battery life, up to 15 device connections, the latest WiFi technology and power to share. Make life that much easier during after school activities or business trips with up to 16 hours of battery life and the convenience of keeping your smartphone going whenever you need to.


Isabel Baez
Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2025
Este aparato me ayudó a estar conectado desde cualquier área, es súper potente y como de llevar.
Jonathan Rich
Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2024
Everything worked great and just like brand new as promised.
PoeJet
Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2018
It works flawlessly with Straight Talk SIM . But it does not work with my at&t SIM. I was unable to figure out how to make at&t card works. I tried resetting the device, reboot and tried to register at&t SIM. This device does not want to recognize my old at&t SIM that I have been using for my iphone. The main reason I bought this device is to use it with at&t carrier since I like their wide range of area coverage. I would have given a 4 star rating otherwise. Battery save mode is good feature that makes longer hours use. Now I end up using this device with Straight Talk SIM card I bought from Walmart ($45 10gb taxt and data) I found no issues setting up its SIM. Please give me advice if anyone know how to make att card works with it.
KC
Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2016
I ordered this for my bride (Meeting Planner), so she can work remotely in 4/5 star hotels (breakout and conference rooms), where WiFi is not as "guaranteed" or as "reliable" as hotels claim. I got the more expensive "unlocked" version, so she can pop in a foreign SIM card and use it "across the pond", Asia or Middle East. It takes the middle-of-the-road size SIM, not the full or micro size SIM.I added this to my Consumer Cellular account (sharing data for an extra $10/month), by ordering a spare CC 3-in-1 SIM online (free with USPS Priority postage 2 day delivery), and using the 192.168.1.1 default address to configure the APN (CCDATA in my case), as well as the hotspot names and passwords. Default user was "admin" and default password was "attadmin", which was quickly changed. There were no manuals, but it did have a quick reference card. Who needs manuals anyway? This links with 4G/LTE and HPSA networks (including T-mobile bands), so you are in a better position to handle variable cellular carriers, services and networks.I wish it had built in AC-class Wifi instead of N-class, but it delivers 300mps, which is stable and acceptable. There is supposed to be a 2016 firmware available thru a AT&T FOTA update, but it hasn't updated itself yet. I don't know if it really needs the update, as it's working perfectly with the 2014 firmware.I've now ordered another for my bride's business partner; who uses her laptop while waiting for her kids at school or at school sporting events.I've also ordered a 35db external Cellular/WiFi antenna (6ft cable) for both units, just-in-case cell signal is low in a building, or if they need to place the hotspot near an exterior wall/window, and use their laptops in another room. These babies even work flawlessly in airports, where you usually pay $20 for substandard (at best) WiFi, or risk using an "open" free WiFi service. Got a dozen road warriors with laptops and tablets complaining about WiFi? Turn this loose and shut them up!The Netgear battery is HUGE, but I wouldn't suggest charging a cell phone off the hotspot, even though they say you can. I would suggest turning off the main screen displaying the hotspot name and password!What more can I say as an endorsement? I like it so much, I ordered another! Maybe I'd order a second battery in a year, and get a + style multi-band combo antenna (AMAKE version). Because the AC-USB adapter is deep, these hotspots need a flexible or larger case than the hardshell ones suggested on Amazon. Pick up a case at a local retailer; once you know everything fits safely.I do suggest setting up your new laptop or tablet network connections as "metered" connections, and limit background processes (Outlook, Dropbox, updates, facebook, twitter, syncing, etc) to keep data usage down a bit.There is a G class (2.5ghz) secondary band available as well, so you can even link up to devices farther away, or connect to older B/G Wifi printers, etc. Anyone still using tablets with older G-class Wifi? This has you covered.You could spend the $40 or $80 for the same device (locked?) under a contract (AT&T, T-mobile or US Cellular), but I decided to bite a bigger upfront cost and adjust my monthly data charge up or down as the need arises (which Consumer Cellular allows). I pay $20 per month more for the 2 devices, and anywhere from $0 to $30 extra depending on the data used that month (up to a max of 4gig). That's a max of $50 total for TWO cellular WiFi hotspots!!!This beats anything the networks are doling out with strings attached or with haphazard "pay as you go" plans. 5G and AC versions will roll out but that will take a couple years. Enjoy!
art
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2014
I got this to replace my satellite internet at home. With AT&T's promotional 30GB pricing, it cost significantly less to add this to my existing mobile share plan than I was paying for satellite, and it works a lot better due to the low latency. It is definitely not designed for this purpose and has some shortcomings in this area.I don't get a great LTE signal, but there are areas in my house where I can put the hotspot to get 3 bars of signal and 13Mbps speed tests. This is perfectly adequate for my needs, and is comparable to my phone in the same spots. The usage display (which also shows the total usage of your other devices) is really handy.But as I said, since this is designed as a portable hotspot, there are some limitations. Here are some that affect me:- The wifi signal, even in the "extended range" mode, is not very strong. It probably won't give anywhere near "whole house" coverage, but extenders are inexpensive and can help with this problem.- The limit of 15 devices is quite arbitrary although it should be enough for most people.- The terminology & setup around the dual bands is rather confusing. You can set either band to be 2.4 or 5GHz; in some places the secondary band is referred to as "guest" although true guest wifi (blocks access to other devices connected to the hotspot) is an option only. Also, you are forced to arbitrarily define a client limit on each band that adds up to less than or equal to 15 -- seems to me that this really should be dynamic.- there is little client management support. You can deny access by mac address, but there are no dhcp reservations, you can't see per-client traffic amounts, there are no logs of anything...To get around some of these limitations you can use a wireless bridge (or repeater with ethernet port) to connect the hotspot to your existing wireless router (via the router's wan port). This way it only shows up as one connection to the hotspot no matter how many devices are on your network, you can connect your wired devices, and you can get the full range and features of your wireless router for your wireless clients.Here's the major downside though. It worked great for the first week or so. Then all my wifi clients were denied access until I rebooted the hotspot. Worked great again for a while. Lately I have been having additional issues (clients are connected, hotspot shows LTE connection, but not passing any traffic) that need a reboot of the hotspot to resolve.As a portable hotspot this is likely to work great for you. I wish AT&T offered a less portable LTE gateway, or that Netgear had an antenna dock for this model like they have for some of their others.Update: a few months after acquiring the hotspot, I got Netgear's charging/antenna cradle for it. This lets me connect it via ethernet cable to my wifi router and I have not used the hotspot as a wifi access point since, except for troubleshooting purposes. Either due to this or thanks to software updates, the hotspot's reliability improved greatly and I only find myself rebooting it every couple months at most.In the summer of 2017 I noticed that the battery had swollen enough to pop the cover off the back. This being an outated model by then, I did find an inexpensive 3rd party battery and the hotspot is still my primary internet connection at home, giving me reasonably fast speeds and good reliability.
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