Had a Roku long ago, but tempted to buy a new one after finding this page. I am actually traveling now, and am considering buying a Roku during this trip if I can use it in my hotel (Hilton with captive portal wifi login), but this bit on the Roku page seems to indicate it won't work unless activate at home first.
I don't imagine a new Roku would know where my home is, but this makes it sound like what I want to do may not work, so hoping for some clarification. Will I be able to activate and use this hotel connect feature of a brand new Roku while on the road?
Thanks.
@cstrombe- As the section you quoted said, your Roku must already have been set up and successfully connected to a network before you can use its hotel/dorm connecting capability. Typically this means setting it up at home before taking it on the road.
But failing that...
If you have a cell phone that can run a wifi Hotspot you can temporarily connect your Roku to that in order to run the initial setup of the Roku.
After that, this document will guide you through setting up a hotel/dorm connection: https://support.roku.com/article/215058118
I doubt it. Unless the hotel WiFi doesn't require using an activation web page, I don't see any way to complete the setup of a new Roku player. You could use a phone hotspot to complete the initial setup, and then connect to the hotel network once it's complete.
I was in a Marriott hotel once that allowed connecting without the login page, but I have a hunch it was because I was on an extremely high floor and most likely the signal could not be accessed outside their building. I've never encountered a Hilton property that let me connect without using the login page.
@cstrombe- As the section you quoted said, your Roku must already have been set up and successfully connected to a network before you can use its hotel/dorm connecting capability. Typically this means setting it up at home before taking it on the road.
But failing that...
If you have a cell phone that can run a wifi Hotspot you can temporarily connect your Roku to that in order to run the initial setup of the Roku.
After that, this document will guide you through setting up a hotel/dorm connection: https://support.roku.com/article/215058118
Ah ok that makes sense, and sounds doable (set up hotspot on phone). Thanks! Follow-up question--which devices offer the "hotel connectivity" option? I'm looking at a local Target and they sell "Roku Express HD" and "Roku Express 4K+" and "Roku Streaming Stick 4K".
@cstrombe wrote:Ah ok that makes sense, and sounds doable (set up hotspot on phone). Thanks! Follow-up question--which devices offer the "hotel connectivity" option? I'm looking at a local Target and they sell "Roku Express HD" and "Roku Express 4K+" and "Roku Streaming Stick 4K".
All Roku players support it. But stay away from the basic Express. For the small additional cost the Express 4K+ is a significantly better player. Better processor, more memory, dual band WiFi and Voice Remote. And it overall just works better.
Actually, the new Roku Express HD 3960 uses the same basic processor as the Roku Express 4k/4k+ and the Ultra devices. (ARM Cortex A55). Also dual-band capable (2.4 and 5ghz) and supports ethernet via an adapter.
https://developer.roku.com/docs/specs/hardware.md
It is light on the RAM (512mb) though. Seems like Roku only likes to provide 1gb RAM to their devices that are capable of streaming 4k content.
I think the Express 4k+ is the better deal though due to the higher RAM (noticeably snappier), additional resolution support, and a better remote/voice remote.
Thanks @AvsGunnar . The Wiki site hasn't been updated, so I wasn't aware they (finally) updated the Express. That's great that it's now dual band, as that was a serious issue for some users.
Update--went with the streaming stick 4k, got it set up on my mobile hotspot, then connected to the hotel wifi, no issues! This is a great feature. Thanks for the help!