Ryan, In Cisco land, check out: config network web-auth captive-bypass enable
But from my experience, only Apple devices would would throw up the page automatically (captive-bypass disabled). So sounds like something changed with Droid? Also, share that check! Kitri Waterman -- Network Engineer (Wireless) University of Oregon On 6/3/15 11:20 AM, Turner, Ryan H wrote: > > So, in the same vein as my email last week… On a new android phone > running version 5.something, a captive portal is being detected by the > device, and it brings up our login page. Good so far. But when they > person gets to the point of downloading the onboarding software or > launching the config file, I ‘assume’ the limited nature of the > captive portal browser is not allowing those things to happen. If I > close the captive portal browser, and open chrome, everything works. > > > > I did a packet trace, and noticed a few things it wants to connect > to. I opened up connectivitycheck.android.com. Still no luck. > > > > I am attempting to make it so when they connect, a limited browser > does NOT launch, and for them to open chrome manually. In the past, I > haven’t seen this problem, so in the even maddening world of Android > (seriously, I have bad thoughts about what I would do if I had an > android developer in front of me), has anyone seen this so far and > figured a way out of it? > > > > I am so tired of constantly chasing google. I need them to send me a > check (Apple can, too, while they are at it). > > > > Ryan H Turner > > Senior Network Engineer > > The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill > > CB 1150 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 > > +1 919 445 0113 Office > > +1 919 274 7926 Mobile > > > > ********** Participation and subscription information for this > EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at > http://www.educause.edu/groups/. > ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.