I travel with my Xbox when I'm gonna be alone. I have used a Mikrotik
running NAT to connect and then authenticate through it. Then I can connect
whatever I like behind it.

-Ty
On Mar 18, 2016 7:07 PM, "Josh Reynolds" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ah, that makes sense.
> On Mar 18, 2016 7:04 PM, "Steve D" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Gotten fairly frequent when the guests are renting "by the month".
>>  (Construction workers, for example.)  They want to hook up their xbox or
>> whatever.
>>
>> -Steve D
>>
>> On Fri, Mar 18, 2016 at 4:44 PM, Nate Burke <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Just got off the phone with Hotel Management getting one bypassed
>>> through the hotspot authentication.  Apparently people bring their gaming
>>> systems to hotels.  I guess could make up a big laminated sheet with a
>>> Static IP Addresses that's bypassed in the hotspot setup, then they would
>>> have to manually enter that in and it would be bypassed.
>>>
>>> When they called me, the guest had already entered in the hotel WAN IP
>>> into the xbox, (I guess they got it from another device that was connected)
>>> but didn't know the subnet or Gateway.  The initial call was 'Give me the
>>> Gateway address for a guest to use'  before I could figure out what they
>>> were actually trying to do.
>>>
>>>
>>> On 3/18/2016 6:38 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
>>>
>>> Is this something you run into frequently?
>>>
>>> I had no idea this was a thing.
>>> On Mar 18, 2016 6:37 PM, "Nate Burke" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> For those of you doing hotels, or anything with a Hotspot portal page.
>>>> How do you handle people who want to hook up gaming systems? From what I
>>>> understand, you can't open a browser unless it can connect to the <gaming>
>>>> network, so it will never be able to click the 'accept' button on the
>>>> proxied webpage.  Do you manually enter in IP Addresses, or bypass MAC's,
>>>> or just outlaw them alltogether?
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>

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