A captive portal has a variety of benefits when deployed into a Wi-Fi network. Being able to keep control of who can access the network, provide lead generation for commercial Wi-Fi environments, or ensure the user accepts terms and conditions are all advantages of a captive portal. Setting up a GWN captive portal is an easy process, and the variety of features available means that you can create a captive portal that is ideal for your deployment. Within this blog post, we’ll provide a step-by-step guide to creating a captive portal for the GWN series of Wi-Fi Access Points.
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Get your mini-eSBC up and running with this six-minute tutorial. Cloud-powered and feature-packed, the SN500 is the world’s smallest and lowest-cost enterprise session border controller. This video quick start guide tells all you need to know to get your new SmartNode all set up—including . . . [embedded content] Four things you need to get started: Internet Access Ethernet Cable Pinhole Tool (pick your fave) Connected computer Six steps to onboarding your SmartNode Watch the video to learn what they are. . . Three options to configure your device using the Patton Cloud: Patton Provisioning Service (download the config to your SN500) Patton’s Web Wizard External (third-party) configuration server After you choose the best configuration option for your network environment, you can check the video for that too! Here they are . . . [embedded content] [embedded content] [embedded content] What do you think? Did we answer all your questions? What sort of application are you implementing with your SN500? Add your thoughts in the comments below… Glendon is responsible for creating corporate marketing and technical content including press releases, web copy, white papers, case studies, educational and tutorial pieces as well as other publications. He serves as editor in chief for Patton's email newsletter and other outbound communications. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from UMUC and a Bachelor of Music in percussion performance from UMCP. Mr. Flowers is a single father with three adult daughters: Lauren, Hannah & Sarah (twins). He plays guitar, bass, keyboards, drums and percussion and enjoys composing and arranging music and songs.
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Visual information is crucial in mission-critical control rooms. One or two seconds of delay can make the difference between a