Health.Zone Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
  2. Captive portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captive_portal

    A captive portal is a web page accessed with a web browser that is displayed to newly connected users of a Wi-Fi or wired network before they are granted broader access to network resources. Captive portals are commonly used to present a landing or log-in page which may require authentication, payment, acceptance of an end-user license ...

  3. WISPr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WISPr

    For authentication by smart-clients, Appendix D defines the Smart Client to Access Gateway Interface Protocol, which is an XML-based protocol for authentication. Smart-client software (and devices that use it) use this so-called WISPr XML to seamlessly login to HotSpots without the need for the user to interact with a captive portal.

  4. Wi-Fi hotspot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_hotspot

    A captive portal / login screen / splash page that users are redirected to for authentication and/or payment. The captive portal / splash page sometimes includes the social login buttons. A payment option using a credit card, iPass, PayPal, or another payment service (voucher-based Wi-Fi) A walled garden feature that allows free access to ...

  5. WiFiDog Captive Portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiFiDog_Captive_Portal

    WiFiDog Captive Portal. WiFiDog was an open source embeddable captive portal solution used to build wireless hotspots. It is no longer an active project after not being updated for several years. [1] WiFiDog consists of two components: the gateway and the authentication server. It was written by the technical team of Île Sans Fil and is ...

  6. pfSense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PfSense

    pfSense. pfSense is a firewall / router computer software distribution based on FreeBSD. The open source pfSense Community Edition (CE) and pfSense Plus is installed on a physical computer or a virtual machine to make a dedicated firewall/router for a network. [3] It can be configured and upgraded through a web-based interface, and requires no ...

  7. Talk:Captive portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Captive_portal

    Note that some OS's include automatica captive portal detection and bring a window with the captive portal page contents for you to login with. Once you've either logged in or agreed to a TOS agreement then your allowed o freely access the internet, either indefinitely or in some cases for a set period of time such as couple hours.

  8. Captive NTFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captive_NTFS

    Captive NTFS. Captive NTFS is a discontinued open-source project in the Linux programming community, started by Jan Kratochvíl. It is a driver wrapper around the original Microsoft Windows NTFS file system driver using parts of ReactOS code. By taking this approach, it aimed to provide safe write support to NTFS partitions.

  9. XORP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XORP

    XORP is an open-source Internet Protocol routing software suite originally designed at the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, California. The name is derived from eXtensible Open Router Platform. It supports OSPF, BGP, RIP, PIM, IGMP, OLSR. The product is designed from principles of software modularity and extensibility and ...