AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Hi all,
Would like to use VOIP phone in hotel rooms when travelling. I travel with laptop. Most hotels have Wi-Fi but some also have Ethernet connection. Possible?
If you have the hardware and there is an ethernet port, it should work. Shouldn't be any authentication issues as surely you would have pre-configured it prior.
If you require an ethernet port and the hotel only has wifi, an option could be to use a wifi access point to bridge the mediums.
Not sure where the OP thinks the issue may be?
I've used it on numerous occasions, albeit running a soft-phone on my PC. So no firewall issues there.
If you have the hardware and there is an ethernet port, it should work. Shouldn't be any authentication issues as surely you would have pre-configured it prior.
If you require an ethernet port and the hotel only has wifi, an option could be to use a wifi access point to bridge the mediums.
Most systems that talk to the hotel PMS for billing look at device by mac address, so adding a new bit of hardware would invoke an authentication session, putting in room number and name could an issue on a phone.
I'm familiar with use of VOIP phones at home and at work. The cat5 cable plugs into modem/router and works seamlessly. My question relates to using the VOIP phone in the hotel guestroom. From your post I take it that with bridging, I can somehow make calls using the connection (Wi-Fi or wired) off my laptop. Is this so?
There are ways around that "problem"Most systems that talk to the hotel PMS for billing look at device by mac address, so adding a new bit of hardware would invoke an authentication session, putting in room number and name could an issue on a phone.
There are ways around that "problem". I carry a small WiFi router with me, that can be configured in several different modes. One mode operates as a true router and hence presents all traffic (either wired or wireless) as a single MAC address, hiding the fact that I may be using more than one device behind my router. So just use one devices to "authenticate" the service and then any number of devices can be routed through the connection.
But note that some home VoIP services may be configured to only operate if the source IP address is within that provider's range, so it may work at home but not then you are on a public network. Some VoIP providers enforce this limitation because they have no control over the connection quality when you are not "on" their network.
I use Skype the same way on my iDevices. The browser does the initial authentication and I am good to go.May be a different solution, but I have been able to employ Skype on my Android 'phone using Wifi at hotels (after signing up). Mainly staying at Hilton family hotels I get Wifi complimentary.)