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How Subscribers Use a Residential Portal
A residential portal is a Web application designed
for use by individual subscribers who use their own computer to connect
to the network, or households composed of multiple subscribers who
use one or more computers and share the same network connection. The
portal can be the single access point for subscribers to log in to
the Internet. In addition to Internet access, a residential portal
lets users manage subscriptions to services that supplement their
basic Internet access package.
Residential portals can be used in wire-line, wireless,
and roaming wireless environments:
- Fixed access environment—Subscribers can connect
to a wholesaler or retailer using PPP, static IP, or DHCP through
media such as cable, DSL, or telephone wire-line connections.
For DHCP connections that do not use equipment
registration, PPP connections, or static IP connections, subscribers
establish connections to a specific provider. If they want to connect
to a different provider, subscribers log out of the current connection,
and then log in to another one.
- Local wireless environment—Subscribers registered
with the local wireless operator can connect to the location, typically
by using DHCP.
- Roaming wireless environment—Subscribers can log
in at a variety of wireless locations owned by service providers that
participate in a roaming network agreement. Typically the connections
use DHCP.
In each of these scenarios, the subscriber’s
experience is similar:
- The subscriber connects to and logs in to an access point.
- Based on the login, the subscriber’s user profile
is retrieved, and services are started on the router.
- The subscriber’s Web browser is redirected to a
home or start page for the residential portal.
- After logging in to the portal, subscribers can manage
the services available from the provider.
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