Sorry to jump in on this thread. Someone else called it to my attention 
and thought we might have something to say about it.

To those that have suggested that "why not roll your own"; Yes this can 
be done but there are lots of pieces to the puzzle to fit together and 
if is not your core competency or your haven't the time then a operator 
may be better off farming out this part of their business to someone 
with a canned solution.

We are fairly familiar with the issues involved as we are just rolling 
out some sites just as you described. Ie. Using hotspots as a means to 
control access for subscribers as well as use for their traditional 
purpose.

If you roll your own you will need at a minimum: routers that includes 
Hotspot functionality, radius, radius hooks to control timeouts, 
integration with a billing system and payment processor, customer 
portal, and support for vouchers or prepaid cards.

Our solution and those of some our competitors include these components. 
Traditional hotspot systems don't really do long-lived subscriber 
management well if at all.

Some one mentioned MAC auth; the Mikrotik hotspot does this. It is 
essential for using a hotspot as a controller for your subscribers as 
login is transparent and non intrusive.

Regards,

Bill Schoolfield
BillMax Billing Solutions

On 11/20/2013 6:26 PM, ralph wrote:
> Scott, maybe you are talking about some of these services that charge
> you per user and take a cut.
>
> That isn’t what W.O. did or what we want, either.
>
> I do not mind paying someone a flat rate to handle my RADIUS requests,
> bandwidth control, and payments via my authorize.net account.  I also do
> not mind BUYING a system to host in my data center.
>
> I am not a web designer or database designer though, so I won’t be
> writing a system.
>
> We acquired another company who had a crude system with one rate plan
> that just used scripts to modify router ACLs.
>
> W.O. was way ahead of that.
>
> These are not just random hotspots in coffee shops, etc. It is the way
> the majority of my customers are processed. The entire wireless network,
> towers, mesh networks, etc. is handled like a giant hotspot.
>
> Are you interested in doing it?
>
> *From:*[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> *On Behalf Of *Scott Carullo
> *Sent:* Tuesday, November 19, 2013 6:42 PM
> *To:* WISPA General List
> *Subject:* Re: [WISPA] Wireless Orbit closing. Interested in new portal
> provider
>
> You really should do this yourself, especially if you can program a
> website....  Why pay someone else every day as your users sign up?  Use
> mikrotik hotspot, clear box radius and a sql server.  Then you write the
> code...  its a little bit of work but then you control it completely and
> can attach to any merchant account / bank you choose.
>
> Or you could pay someone to set up your own then you still own and
> maintain it...
>
> Scott Carullo
> Technical Operations
> 855-FLSPEED x102
>
> Image removed by sender.
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *From*: "ralph" <[email protected]>
> *Sent*: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 12:27 PM
> *To*: [email protected], "WISPA General List" <[email protected]>
> *Subject*: Re: [WISPA] Wireless Orbit closing. Interested in new portal
> provider
>
> I have the contact info for the Owner/CoFounder of Wireless Orbit. I
> have been with them since they started in Palo Alto. I visited them
> there.  Last week he did offer to sell me the Intellectual Property as
> well as to set up the system in my data center.
>
> There's at least one member (besides us) who is talking to them about
> acquiring the business.
>
> We are also looking at WiFiRush (formerly WiFiCPA). We can buy the VM
> version to run the system for $1000.00.
>
> Looks like it does a little more than Wireless Orbit.
>
> Ralph
>
> *From:*[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> *On Behalf Of *John Scrivner
> *Sent:* Sunday, November 17, 2013 2:17 AM
> *To:* WISPA General List
> *Subject:* Re: [WISPA] Wireless Orbit closing. Interested in new portal
> provider
>
> Perhaps you could contact them to see about acquiring their business? Do
> you have contact information for them?
>
> John Scrivner
>
> On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 3:36 PM, ralph <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>     We've been using Wireless Orbit for our captive portal AAA and
>     payments for
>     years.
>     Now they drop the bombshell that they will be closing in 2 weeks.
>
>     Who is using something they can recommend?
>
>     Requirements:
>
>     Work with Mikrotik hotspot.
>     Handles multiple locations, all different with different rules,
>     settings,
>     login pages, etc.
>     Handles various payment plans and time limits.
>     Supports Authorize.net
>     Preferably has a flat cost, not a percentage like many of them do.
>
>     Nice to haves:
>     Can support auto login by MAC
>     Allows users to associate browserless devices with their account.
>     Aggregates simultaneous usage against the maximum set bandwidth (ie. If
>     limit is 6 Mbps down and they have 4 devices running, each device
>     can't use
>     all 6 Mbps simultaneously.)
>
>     MT User Manager is not an option- doesn't do multiple portals
>     Not sure if the one Butch Evans sells will do it, I think the
>     portals take
>     custom code by the author to implement/change, but I am open to looking.
>
>     Thanks
>
>     Ralph
>
>
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>
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