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Using Roku or Chromecast

dgodinez
Explorer
Explorer
I was wondering if anyone uses Roku or Chromecast when staying at RV parks or camps that provide free WIFI. I use them at home for streaming movies and such, but my concern will be that the parks FREE WIFI will be too slow to handle the load, I also have seen places that limit the amount of bandwidth that can be used.

Any comments will be appreciated.
33 REPLIES 33

bluwtr49
Explorer II
Explorer II
Bill.Satellite wrote:
Even the parks that have reasonably fast speeds often specifically block those kinds of streaming activities as they will pull the whole system down. Many actually block access to sites like YouTube and Netflix.


Yes, I've noticed the same thing. Some parks are putting a notice on their WiFi info that excessive use will cause a suspension in service so I mostly use my Verizon tethering for large doneloads.
Dick

2002 43' DP Beaver Marquis Emerald Cat C-12 505 HP, 1600 Tq
2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland ---toad

rgatijnet1
Explorer III
Explorer III
Bill.Satellite wrote:
Why did you log off? Open is open. You are welcome. If McDonald's had been next door would you have logged off of that connection?


I have NEVER seen an network that says it is OPEN to the public. I have seen networks that are privately owned that say "secured" or "unsecured". Unsecured does not mean that it is open to every person that is too cheap to pay for their own private network. McDonalds has their own log on page so you know that you are using their network, and not the network of some private individual.

turbojimmy
Explorer
Explorer
wcjeep wrote:
I think so. It sounds like you want to stream from public wifi through the Hootoo to the Chromecast.


Yes. I would also need it for what you do - providing a network for the Chromecast so I can stream stored media.

Thanks for the info.
1984 Allegro M-31 (Dead Metal)

rk911
Explorer
Explorer
Bill.Satellite wrote:
Why did you log off? Open is open. You are welcome. If McDonald's had been next door would you have logged off of that connection?


McDonald's provides the wifi for the use of their customers. "Bill Smith", the private citizen does not. "Bill" contracts with an ISP for the benefit of his household and nobody else (that will be in the ISP's terms of service). next door neighbors and others who may detect his signal are not part of his household. sure, "Bill" should lock down his wifi signal but if "Bill" left his garage door open would you feel entitled to borrow his lawnmower, tools, etc?
Rich
Ham Radio, Sport Pilot, Retired 9-1-1 Call Center Administrator
_________________________________
2016 Itasca Suncruiser 38Q
'46 Willys CJ2A
'23 Jeep Wrangler JL
'10 Jeep Liberty KK

& MaggieThe Wonder Beagle

wcjeep
Explorer
Explorer
turbojimmy wrote:
wcjeep wrote:
If your movies are locally stored it would be possible to use Chromecast Screen Cast to send movies to the TV. All Cast app is another option. My latest gadget allows Chromecast anywhere from stored media. The HooToo TripMate also has directions for logging in to public WiFi with registration page. HooToo can also be used to bridge or relay weak WiFi.

http://www.amazon.com/Arrival-HooToo%C2%AE-TripMate-Versatile-Wireless/dp/B00IMYMG12/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1407467423&sr=8-1&keywords=hootoo+tripmate


So can you connect to WiFi (versus wired as in the product description) with the HooToo, connect the Chromecast to the HooToo network and stream (bad form, slow bandwith, etc. aside)?



I think so. It sounds like you want to stream from public wifi through the Hootoo to the Chromecast. The Hootoo supports b/g/n wireless. I bought it to stream movies locally stored on my device. It is also handy to download data from Apple devices straight to memory stick. No PC or Mac required. I'm also interested in Bridge mode (repeater). Have not tested that yet.

Should also work with Roku. I don't own one. Also, many mobile devices can either directly connect to your TV or do so with an adapter.

Robin1953
Explorer
Explorer
the bear II wrote:
I have a Sony TV box and tried to use it at the RV Resort. The WiFi is provided by Tengo and you have to access a webpage from your browser to activate the WiFi. There was no way to get the Sony TV to access a webpage before it had internet access. Couldn't use it.
Get a Cradlepoint or similar router. They will allow you to access the webpage to get signed on then attach your Sony to the Cradlepoint.
2015 Grand Design Solitude 320X
2016 Ram 3500 DRW and Cummins

turbojimmy
Explorer
Explorer
wcjeep wrote:
If your movies are locally stored it would be possible to use Chromecast Screen Cast to send movies to the TV. All Cast app is another option. My latest gadget allows Chromecast anywhere from stored media. The HooToo TripMate also has directions for logging in to public WiFi with registration page. HooToo can also be used to bridge or relay weak WiFi.

http://www.amazon.com/Arrival-HooToo%C2%AE-TripMate-Versatile-Wireless/dp/B00IMYMG12/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1407467423&sr=8-1&keywords=hootoo+tripmate


So can you connect to WiFi (versus wired as in the product description) with the HooToo, connect the Chromecast to the HooToo network and stream (bad form, slow bandwith, etc. aside)?
1984 Allegro M-31 (Dead Metal)

wcjeep
Explorer
Explorer
Bill.Satellite wrote:
Why did you log off? Open is open. You are welcome. If McDonald's had been next door would you have logged off of that connection?


Hackers look for free WiFi to infect others.

If your movies are locally stored it would be possible to use Chromecast Screen Cast to send movies to the TV. All Cast app is another option. My latest gadget allows Chromecast anywhere from stored media. The HooToo TripMate also has directions for logging in to public WiFi with registration page. HooToo can also be used to bridge or relay weak WiFi.

http://www.amazon.com/Arrival-HooToo%C2%AE-TripMate-Versatile-Wireless/dp/B00IMYMG12/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1407467423&sr=8-1&keywords=hootoo+tripmate

Bill_Satellite
Explorer II
Explorer II
Why did you log off? Open is open. You are welcome. If McDonald's had been next door would you have logged off of that connection?
What I post is my 2 cents and nothing more. Please don't read anything into my post that's not there. If you disagree, that's OK.
Can't we all just get along?

RoyB
Explorer II
Explorer II
I'm guessing that the VERIZON JET PACK or the Millenicom will give you a WIFI HOT SPOT and you can do whatever you want with that using up to 10 of your WIFI ready devices...

Of course it isn't free WIFI...

We give up chasing down FREE WIFI years ago...

Roy Ken
My Posts are IMHO based on my experiences - Words in CAPS does not mean I am shouting
Roy - Carolyn
RETIRED DOAF/DON/DOD/CONTR RADIO TECH (42yrs)
K9PHT (Since 1957) 146.52M
2010 F150, 5.4,3:73 Gears,SCab
2008 Starcraft 14RT EU2000i GEN
2005 Flagstaff 8528RESS

Alphamonk
Explorer
Explorer
I stayed at a campground about a year ago and was surprised that I was able to watch anything i wanted on Netflix. Then I realized my Ipad had logged onto someone else's wifi that I guess lived right next to the campground. Maybe it was the campground owner's wifi. Of course I logged off at once. Guess some people don't secure their wifi.

rk911
Explorer
Explorer
dgodinez wrote:
I was wondering if anyone uses Roku or Chromecast when staying at RV parks or camps that provide free WIFI. I use them at home for streaming movies and such, but my concern will be that the parks FREE WIFI will be too slow to handle the load, I also have seen places that limit the amount of bandwidth that can be used.

Any comments will be appreciated.


it's considered bad form, rude and selfish behavior to stream video over a CG's free wifi system. most systems can't handle that and some CG's are now throttling connections down to a snail's crawl when any sort of streaming is detected. if you want to stream suggest you contract for access from Verizon, millenicom, etc.
Rich
Ham Radio, Sport Pilot, Retired 9-1-1 Call Center Administrator
_________________________________
2016 Itasca Suncruiser 38Q
'46 Willys CJ2A
'23 Jeep Wrangler JL
'10 Jeep Liberty KK

& MaggieThe Wonder Beagle

ChooChooMan74
Explorer
Explorer
Roku would be a better choice right now if you rip movies and want to play them back on the TV. I haven't had much luck with tje chromecast, and chromecast needs to be hooked to a network. Most campgrounds require a sign on, and you can't do that on a chromecast. But, I do have a workaround on it on my YouTube.

Connecting Your Chromecast To A Hotel Network: http://youtu.be/2JQfzf_VMTs
Great American Anti-Towing Conspiracy
2015 Ram Truck 1500 Ecodiesel Tuned By Green Diesel
2006 Jeep Liberty CRD Tuned By Green Diesel (Retired to Daily Driver)
2015 Rockwood Roo 183
Stop on by and read my Camping Blogs
Nights Camped in 2015 - 19 and Winterized

the_bear_II
Explorer
Explorer
I have a Sony TV box and tried to use it at the RV Resort. The WiFi is provided by Tengo and you have to access a webpage from your browser to activate the WiFi. There was no way to get the Sony TV to access a webpage before it had internet access. Couldn't use it.

mmccray100
Explorer
Explorer
I use Roku for Netflix. I found out that you can set up Netflix to send a degraded signal using only .3 gig per hour rather than the normal 3 gigs. I'm at a park right now where I've been able to access Netflix with only sporadic slow-downs, until the evening when too many people are online. But, I've been at other parks where it does not work at all. I make sure my Kindle Reader is full of un-read books for those nights I cannot get Netflix.