TunnelBear(VPN) doesnt play good whit Chromecast - Google Chromecast

I changed my VPN provider(UnblockUS) because it wasnt working on some sections of GooglePlay (cant buy and watch movies(region lock)) but everything other was okay.
Now im using TunnelBear everything is fine but,when i set VPN On it connects to TunnelBear servers. Then my Chromecast dissapears from list of devices(in Chrome browser PC only). When i turn off VPN Chromecast device is back in list.
On other devices like my Find 5 or iPad 3 while connected to Tunnelbear VPN shows my Chromecast device fine.
I tryed to bridge soft adapter(TBear thing) to my LAN adapter but i lose VPN and cant use GooglePlay.
Any help to resolve this issue?

i'm having the exact same issue. moved from unblock.us to a different vpn this week and now i can't see my chromecast

Karlo666 said:
I changed my VPN provider(UnblockUS) because it wasnt working on some sections of GooglePlay (cant buy and watch movies(region lock)) but everything other was okay.
Now im using TunnelBear everything is fine but,when i set VPN On it connects to TunnelBear servers. Then my Chromecast dissapears from list of devices(in Chrome browser PC only). When i turn off VPN Chromecast device is back in list.
On other devices like my Find 5 or iPad 3 while connected to Tunnelbear VPN shows my Chromecast device fine.
I tryed to bridge soft adapter(TBear thing) to my LAN adapter but i lose VPN and cant use GooglePlay.
Any help to resolve this issue?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am outside US. For me, I enable VPN (not using tunnelbear though), buy a movie, then disable the VPN, then cast. Does that work for you?

ykphuah said:
I am outside US. For me, I enable VPN (not using tunnelbear though), buy a movie, then disable the VPN, then cast. Does that work for you?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did tryed that and it doesnt work.
If i buy a movie and turn off VPN i cant cast it because it cant retrieve licence for playing.
Tryed that on phone/tablet and PC

Karlo666 said:
I did tryed that and it doesnt work.
If i buy a movie and turn off VPN i cant cast it because it cant retrieve licence for playing.
Tryed that on phone/tablet and PC
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you change your credit card to US?
Just remove your current credit card, then add it back again, with a real zip code and phone number. Then wait 1-2 hours (at this time mine always show payment denied).
Now I am able to buy music without VPN even. For Movies I still need VPN though. But once its bought, I don't need VPN anymore for either.

Ninjas edited this.. Misinformation

ykphuah said:
Did you change your credit card to US?
Just remove your current credit card, then add it back again, with a real zip code and phone number. Then wait 1-2 hours (at this time mine always show payment denied).
Now I am able to buy music without VPN even. For Movies I still need VPN though. But once its bought, I don't need VPN anymore for either.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can do all of that stuff whitout VPN but i cant Cast Movies/TV to my Chromecast device whitout VPN active.

Well...
Grammar...

yeah i kinda have the same problem, if i turn off tunnelbear, my chromecast can be detected from my phone, but once i turn on tunnelbear to access netflix, chromecast stops working..... =/
any workaround for this? its kinda the only reason i got a chromecast in the first place.....

Technically you shouldn't expect this to work because the Chromecast has to be on the same LAN as the casting device, and when you use a VPN on the casting device you are putting it on a different LAN.
Not to mention that if you are using the VPN on the casting device to bypass geoblocking, then it probably wouldn't work even if you could see the Chromecast because the Chromecast also has to use the VPN to bypass geoblocking. You would have to set up the VPN in your router so that it affects both the casting device and the Chromecast. You can do that with advanced router firmware like DD-WRT, but not with most consumer routers using stock firmware.

Suggestion
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Related

[Q] Chromecast at Mainland China

Is anyone living in Mainland China using Chromecast well?
I only can access Youtube and Netflix via VPN, but some of my friends don't want to setup VPN, how can they enjoy Chromecast?
Move?
wyt2014 said:
Is anyone living in Mainland China using Chromecast well?
I only can access Youtube and Netflix via VPN, but some of my friends don't want to setup VPN, how can they enjoy Chromecast?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If they don't use VPN or a DNS abstractor like Unotelly or Unlocator, then any apps that are not available in your country won't work. Likely this includes HBO Go, Netflix, etc. Any apps that pull content from a service that is supported in your country should work, but will only show content for your country (same as using a computer, or possibly more limited).
wyt2014 said:
Is anyone living in Mainland China using Chromecast well?
I only can access Youtube and Netflix via VPN, but some of my friends don't want to setup VPN, how can they enjoy Chromecast?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HI,
Can you give me a bit of advice how to make it work with VPN in CHina?
I had mine working locally, watching local files from my computer but never outside websites.
ANy help or advice you can offer will be appreciated. I am living in Shenzhen.
Thanks
Wylie
wyt2014 said:
Is anyone living in Mainland China using Chromecast well?
I only can access Youtube and Netflix via VPN, but some of my friends don't want to setup VPN, how can they enjoy Chromecast?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Chromecast works great two months ago (zh-CN).
But recently, you are not easy to see the chromecast icon in your app (except youtube, netflix).
On TV (chromecast), there is message like "LAN is ready, but internet is not connected."
Without VPN, sometimes, it works OK for media source (e.g.: sohu, youku) with y2cast.
I could use chromecast yesterday without VPN.
mimepp said:
Chromecast works great two months ago (zh-CN).
But recently, you are not easy to see the chromecast icon in your app (except youtube, netflix).
On TV (chromecast), there is message like "LAN is ready, but internet is not connected."
Without VPN, sometimes, it works OK for media source (e.g.: sohu, youku) with y2cast.
I could use chromecast yesterday without VPN.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HI,
Yes, these days my Chromecast says it's connected to the network but does NOT have internet access.
Is this a google block for devices that are inside of CHina?
How can I even get the device to work for me locally, streaming data from my laptop? It used to work but cannot work recently at all!!!
Thanks
Wylie
wylie99 said:
HI,
Yes, these days my Chromecast says it's connected to the network but does NOT have internet access.
Is this a google block for devices that are inside of CHina?
How can I even get the device to work for me locally, streaming data from my laptop? It used to work but cannot work recently at all!!!
Thanks
Wylie
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sometimes, you could see the chromecast icon, then it is OK for everything.
How do you stream from your laptop? chrome browser?
I always use app on android to stream media (UPNP/Samba etc) with y2cast+wondershare.
This is slightly related... Does anyone use a google nexus phone in mainland China? I want to get a HK Huawei Nexus 6P, but am worried the experience will be problematic on a hardware and essential software front. I have no problems sporadically using a vpn with wifi, but I don't think I could use the vpn consistently 24/7 during roaming. Anybody with experience of this? PLease let me know.
Thanks in advance.
I just traveled through China - Beijing, Ningbo, Hangzhou then Shenzhen - using Nexus 6p with Project Fi. In Beijing and Shenzhen, seemed OK, including receiving Gmail
boltd said:
I just traveled through China - Beijing, Ningbo, Hangzhou then Shenzhen - using Nexus 6p with Project Fi. In Beijing and Shenzhen, seemed OK, including receiving Gmail
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, this is good enough information for me to finally grab a nexus despite being in Beijing.

Making Rooted safer than Stock

Dear Team Eureka there is one thing you may do with security of Chromecast that Google did not.
You may add the missing security feature:
"if there is no connection to preset network" - "do not enable unprotected wifi ap mode" unless user will press reset button for short time (something like enable/disable wifi feature with openwrt)
There is plenty of things you ma use button for in future
(you may use different functions within different interval)
press
1-5 seconds
6- 15... and so on
I like this feature!
I agree that the way it is currently working is not as secure as it could be...
But I think the better way to do all of this is the following:
1 - Never have the CCast automatically connect to an Open Wireless unless specifically told to via Setup (not sure if it does this now or not)
2 - (and this would be the alternative to your suggestion) CCast doesn't leave any unprotected network sans AP connection for setup. It's default setup mode is a protected WiFi either WEP or WPA
CCast should instead set a random pin/pass and WPA/WEP connection for use in setup when it can't find an authorized AP.
Since you should have access to the screen it is plugged into and hackers would not, you would make the connection to the CCast in protected mode using the PIN that is displayed on the screen to make the connection to the protected network. Once connected you set up the device normally.
Much better than walking over to the TV and device to press a button and much more secure because the only way to set up or take over the unit requires access to the TV it is plugged into.
As far as the Button is concerned I would really like to see it used to switch modes and add a DLNA device mode to the custom rom. Unless the ROM could add this feature while still in CCast mode.
Asphyx said:
1 - Never have the CCast automatically connect to an Open Wireless unless specifically told to via Setup
2 - (and this would be the alternative to your suggestion) CCast doesn't leave any unprotected network sans AP connection. It's default setup mode is a protected WiFi either WEP or WPA
CCast should instead set a random pin/pass and WPA/WEP connection for use in setup when it can't find an authorized AP.
Since you should have access to the screen it is plugged into and hackers would not, you would make the connection to the CCast in protected mode using the PIN that is displayed on the screen to make the connection to the protected network. Once connected you set up the device normally.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
AFAIK Chromecast never does #1 - it won't auto-connect to any AP unless it's already set up.
Agree on #2 though. Actually, both yours and mathorv's suggestion could be used in conjunction - Chromecast should use WEP security* on its setup AP and turning on the setup AP could be set to require human interaction.
*mainly for compatibility with clients/routers that don't support WPA or better - yes, they still exist - crackable, yes, but still better than completely open as it is now.
Since the serial number is easily accessible on the unit itself and its box, that could be an easy-to-get password, and the 4-character alphanumeric ID shown on the TV could be a secondary confirmation for Setup, not just a convenient way to make sure you're connected to the correct Chromecast (does Google really think/hope there will be that many Chromecasts out there being set up at the same time?).
Also if http will be protected with https also passwords it may be better to config Chromecast wireless options via https/ssh.
Is there any way to implement power save for example trigger via ssh/https?
bhiga said:
AFAIK Chromecast never does #1 - it won't auto-connect to any AP unless it's already set up.
Agree on #2 though. Actually, both yours and mathorv's suggestion could be used in conjunction - Chromecast should use WEP security* on its setup AP and turning on the setup AP could be set to require human interaction.
*mainly for compatibility with clients/routers that don't support WPA or better - yes, they still exist - crackable, yes, but still better than completely open as it is now.
Since the serial number is easily accessible on the unit itself and its box, that could be an easy-to-get password, and the 4-character alphanumeric ID shown on the TV could be a secondary confirmation for Setup, not just a convenient way to make sure you're connected to the correct Chromecast (does Google really think/hope there will be that many Chromecasts out there being set up at the same time?).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thats why I think whenever it can't find an AP to connect to it shouldn't take anything for it to generate a random password (changes everytime) that can be used until setup is complete...
As for HTTP access i it is not connected to an AP there really is no HTTP available until you have connected to it in some way.
I would be happy if Google allowed us some config tools but I don't think they are all that interested in us having control over the unit for DRM purposes.
The devs at Plex have even said that Google will not allow them to implement sending to CCast as part of their Local PlexWeb (Plex.TV is fine though)
This suggests they really do not want anything they can't approve or any usage that could expose how the device is talked to being left open to the public.
I guess they figure that if we can see how linkage and communication is done we will reverse engineer it to play and do things they don't want us doing or bypassing DRM schemes as they currently work.
bhiga said:
Agree on #2 though. Actually, both yours and mathorv's suggestion could be used in conjunction - Chromecast should use WEP security* on its setup AP and turning on the setup AP could be set to require human interaction.
*mainly for compatibility with clients/routers that don't support WPA or better - yes, they still exist - crackable, yes, but still better than completely open as it is now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
WEP is broken for over 10 years now! No sane human being is using it. Cracking WEP is extremely fast and easy. WEP is a false protection, illlusion of security. Using WEP is BLASHEMY.
mathorv said:
WEP is broken for over 10 years now! No sane human being is using it. Cracking WEP is extremely fast and easy. WEP is a false protection, illlusion of security. Using WEP is BLASHEMY.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Obviously you feel strongly about WEP.
I'm not going to argue that, because you are right that WEP is easily broken. WPA can be broken too, but with more effort.
That said, WEP is an illusion of security only if you expect it to be unbreakable, just like passwords and everything else.
Seat belts won't save you in every accident, but if you don't expect them to, they are still helpful in the event of an accident.
Now if you're driving recklessly because you think seat belts and air bags will save you, then yes it is a false sense of security and you're foolish to take extra risks.
But for the Chromecast setup AP that is temporary by nature, are you suggesting that it is better to not use any security at all, just as it is right now?
You know what I always say.....
"Just because you are Diagnosed Paranoid doesn't mean people aren't out to get you!"
LOL
This is the second conversation regarding CCast vulnerability and so far all we have identified as a REAL security concern is that someone could set up the CCast to connect to some WiFi other than yours which would lead to the grand total tragedy that they could send content to your TV.
The other conversation was in regards to the Rooted ROM having SSH and Telnet installed that could be used to hack your Router Password provided you had already hacked the router password to make the connection to the CCast in the first place to use those tools to get what you already have!
Here is something folks should take into account....NOTHING IS SECURE EVER!
Even the Servers in Iran's Nuke Plant that had no connection to the outside world whatsoever were compromised, Hacked and attacked by Stuxnet!
There is no security ever the only thing you can ever really do is make the hack hard enough and as time consuming as possible that they will move onto someone else's system to pry into their Word Docs and that private folder you keep your IFriends profile pictures in instead. LOL
Yes WEP can be hacked. Imagine how much fun someone will have after they set up your CCast to use their network and try to send content to a TV never knowing if you actually noticed it or not because they can't see your TV.
It's still a damn site better than leaving an Open WiFi AP on the CCast until setup which takes no hacking skill at all to crack.
The way I look at it if the person is smart enough to hack they are also smart enough to know there is no point in hacking a CCast...Not when there is a WiFi router that gets them a hell of a lot more personal info and much more access than just displaying content to your TV.
Asphyx said:
This is the second conversation regarding CCast vulnerability and so far all we have identified as a REAL security concern is that someone could set up the CCast to connect to some WiFi other than yours which would lead to the grand total tragedy that they could send content to your TV.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
While this would be a great dorm prank, at least with the current functionality of Chromecast, that's all they get to do... turn on the TV and send whatever video to the TV they want, which would be quite scary/annoying. Think of the beginning of Back to the Future Part II where all the screens in the house turn on with Marty's boss telling him he's fired.
Asphyx said:
The other conversation was in regards to the Rooted ROM having SSH and Telnet installed that could be used to hack your Router Password provided you had already hacked the router password to make the connection to the CCast in the first place to use those tools to get what you already have!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually I think the scenario @mathorv described is a little different and easy to exploit.
Chromecast is in setup mode and broadcasting an open AP
Attacker connects to the open AP
Attacker connects to Web Panel and enables ADB/Telnet/SSH (because web panel currently does not require authentication, Team Eureka said authentication is coming)
Attacker connects to Chromecast via ADB, Telnet, or SSH and gets access to the root filesystem, where they can see the cleartext password and SSID of the AP that Chromecast normally connects to (because password is stored in supplicant config file which is accessible)
So the attacker does not need anything more than to see the Chromecastnnnn AP.
Sadly, the WPA authentication seems to be stored the same way on phones/tablets as well. The only thing that shields phones/tablets from the same type of attack is not all of them have root and they usually aren't accessible from the network. Hence, with root comes extra responsibility, which is why root often is made difficult.
Asphyx said:
Here is something folks should take into account....NOTHING IS SECURE EVER!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup. What we commonly call "security" is really just a deterrent. It increases the effort and the hope is that the attacker will pick an easier target. It's why we put locks on doors when it's often relatively simple to bypass them.
bhiga said:
Chromecast is in setup mode and broadcasting an open AP
Attacker connects to the open AP
Attacker connects to Web Panel and enables ADB/Telnet/SSH (because web panel currently does not require authentication, Team Eureka said authentication is coming)
Attacker connects to Chromecast via ADB, Telnet, or SSH and gets access to the root filesystem, where they can see the cleartext password and SSID of the AP that Chromecast normally connects to (because password is stored in supplicant config file which is accessible)
So the attacker does not need anything more than to see the Chromecastnnnn AP.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Except for the fact that if it is not connected to the router then that means the router is unavailable, and or the Password saved in cleartext isn't working. If it was it would be connected and not in Setup mode.
Thats the point I was trying to get across there....
Sure you could find passwords to APs the CCast was connected to...
But if it isn't connected at the time of the hack then those APs are not available if they were you would not be able to connect to the CCast.
And if they are available then anything saved in the CCast is worthless since the CCast couldn't use it to connect either.
And I told him how to plug that hole far better than via the ROM....
Turn on Mac Filtering so not only do you need the password but need to clone a MAC address as well.
And all of this to get at what?
Your last will and testament and some compromising Pictures?
If you make it difficult enough that the payoff isn't worth the effort they will move on....
Asphyx said:
Except for the fact that if it is not connected to the router then that means the router is unavailable, and or the Password saved in cleartext isn't working. If it was it would be connected and not in Setup mode.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ahh, I see your point now.
At least for me, sometimes Chromecast will "miss" the connection shortly after boot, so the setup AP is available for a few minutes after a reboot. To exploit that, someone would need to be sitting and listening for it to pop up - not a "juicy" target, but still possible. People do strange things "just because they can" - at least that's what YouTube teaches me.
As you say, MAC filtering provides an additional deterrent level. Unfortunately the target customer is probably not sophisticated enough to do that. I'm not sure all ISP-provided devices (I avoid integrated hardware that I can't configure) allows setting MAC restrictions though.
Asphyx said:
But if it isn't connected at the time of the hack then those APs are not available if they were you would not be able to connect to the CCast.
And if they are available then anything saved in the CCast is worthless since the CCast couldn't use it to connect either.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, in theory, you could connect to the CCast when it is in unprotected AP mode, enable ssh, and write a shell script which gets started every boot and sends out the saved wifi password somewhere to the internet. Then, when the CCast owner sets up is wifi, and sometimes later reboots, the wifi passwords will be sent out.
But... since there are probably only a few thousand rooted Chromecasts, and the time window in which to push the script to the Chromecast is so narrow, I doubt anyone would spend any time to try this.
bhiga said:
Unfortunately the target customer is probably not sophisticated enough to do that. I'm not sure all ISP-provided devices (I avoid integrated hardware that I can't configure) allows setting MAC restrictions though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm sure thats true but if your not sophisticated enough to control your own Network or let an ISP do it all for you the least of your issues are what might happen in the odd chance CCast is disconnected or in the 30 seconds before it connects to an AP during Bootup. Locking up the holes in a CCast sure isn't going to help you much LOL
frantisek.nesveda said:
Well, in theory, you could connect to the CCast when it is in unprotected AP mode, enable ssh, and write a shell script which gets started every boot and sends out the saved wifi password somewhere to the internet. Then, when the CCast owner sets up is wifi, and sometimes later reboots, the wifi passwords will be sent out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well in theory you could have it do location checks with Google and map location, SSID and Password of every AP it ever connects to...
Like I said to what end would someone do that?
What is the PAYOFF in the end?
I could understand it if your living next to Bill Gates and wanted to steal banking info....
The Average Joe doesn't have anything worth seeing that would make someone go through all of that especially when they could get it much easier by just sniffing WiFi packets and finding the same data and decrypting it.
They could sit there all day and hack the Router but they have such a small window to work with on an unconnected CCast either because they have to catch it rebooting or catch it in a location that it isn't setup for and unless you have written a program to do all of that without Human Intervention you still got a snowballs chance in hell of getting any worthwhile information...
Security only happens when there are multiple layers of protection that make it so difficult to breach that they won't bother unless the payoff is worth it.
Someone really has to hate you in order to go through all that so some of the best security practices you can implement is don't be an AZZ and no one will have it out for you enough to want to get something on you via a Hack! LOL
(Not suggesting anyone in this discussion is just saying in General LOL)
Asphyx said:
Like I said to what end would someone do that?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, would you give me your WiFi password?
I can think of a few things you could do with access to someone's WiFi... Free internet, torrenting on someone else's responsibility, or just messing with someone.
Asphyx said:
I could understand it if your living next to Bill Gates and wanted to steal banking info...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The real question here is... Would Bill Gates buy a Google Chromecast? :laugh:
frantisek.nesveda said:
Well, would you give me your WiFi password?
I can think of a few things you could do with access to someone's WiFi... Free internet, torrenting on someone else's responsibility, or just messing with someone.
The real question here is... Would Bill Gates buy a Google Chromecast? :laugh:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sure! I could very easily give you my router password and you would still not be able to do anything you mentioned until you figured out a MAC address one of my networked devices actually uses.
And to my other point...Is Free Internet or messing with someone really worth the risk of going to a Federal Pen for hacking?
As for what Bill Gates has I wonder if he is even running Windows 8 cause I don't know anyone who has it that likes it! LOL
Asphyx said:
Sure! I could very easily give you my router password and you would still not be able to do anything you mentioned until you figured out a MAC address one of my networked devices actually uses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good point.
I guess that if we really wanted, we could play this cat and mouse game for quite some time, but the outcome would be that if you really care about security, you can make your network secure enough. But that would be just spamming the thread.
frantisek.nesveda said:
but the outcome would be that if you really care about security, you can make your network secure enough. But that would be just spamming the thread.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually I think what I was trying to say is that no matter how much you care and try to be secure...
If they want you they WILL get you and they don't need nor would they do it through your CCast when there are far better tried and true methods to attack a wireless router directly that doesn't require LUCK of a device not connecting or the timing of catching it while it is booting up in order to catch the weakness.
Any security hole that results from the CCast will likely never amount to anything more than the Prankish "Look what dirtyPorn I put on your screen"
If they want dirt they will go to the router which is always up and doesn't require some act of god or electronics to happen.
You secure your router the best you can and if that isn't enough then you need to keep your wireless off until you need it to be TRULY secure....
And even then there is nothing to stop them from tapping into the pole where your Internet connection comes in and getting you that way!
Security is nothing more than an illusion and a deterrent...Truth is your never secure no matter how much you worry which says to me...Worrying is pointless. Unless you have enemies that really want to get you...and if thats the case all the security in the world won't stop them!
Asphyx said:
Actually I think what I was trying to say is that no matter how much you care and try to be secure...
If they want you they WILL get you and they don't need nor would they do it through your CCast when there are far better tried and true methods to attack a wireless router directly that doesn't require LUCK of a device not connecting or the timing of catching it while it is booting up in order to catch the weakness.
Any security hole that results from the CCast will likely never amount to anything more than the Prankish "Look what dirtyPorn I put on your screen"
If they want dirt they will go to the router which is always up and doesn't require some act of god or electronics to happen.
You secure your router the best you can and if that isn't enough then you need to keep your wireless off until you need it to be TRULY secure....
And even then there is nothing to stop them from tapping into the pole where your Internet connection comes in and getting you that way!
Security is nothing more than an illusion and a deterrent...Truth is your never secure no matter how much you worry which says to me...Worrying is pointless. Unless you have enemies that really want to get you...and if thats the case all the security in the world won't stop them!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
MAC access list = joke, blacklist is also a illusion changing MAC address(spoofing MAC) is extremely easy on any platform.
In case of whitelist Attacker will look into it just a bit for a longer, to know list of allowed devices.
At home you will have to whitelist every new device...
In corporate environment it will take you more time also WPA2-PSK is not suitable for serous corporate use.
About absolute security.
Security is relative term. Its just like healthy life style, it will not make you immune to diseases, it will make you generally healthier, less likely to get ill.

[Q] Can not stream apps over wifi at home

i have searched and read and searched some more and can not come up with anything.
here is my issue, i have a s4a, i have comcast modem with a netgear router, i have streamed pandora on this setup for at least a year or more, occasionally netflix and of course some youtube videos. a few weeks ago i signed up for hulu plus, got a chromecast and went to streaming video from my phone. i watched several shows through the chromcast from my phone as well as a movie on HBOgo. last week sometime something has happened and i can no longer stream anything on my phone, hulu, netflix, hbo, pandora, none of these work, i downloaded cartoon network and it works fine. if i disconnect from my wireless network i can stream all of them, as soon as i connect to wifi "unfortunatly (app) has stopped". i have reset my modem, router, wiped my phone, updated my phone to 4.3, re wiped the phone, and still nothing, as of this moment the only app that i have downloaded on my phone is pandora, and i can not stream when connected to wifi...
if i go anywhere else and connect to their wifi everything works fine... why did my phone all of a sudden stop streaming on my network only?
my wifes iphone works fine with all of the above and connected to the chromecast
any help would be great as i am ready to smash this phone
tp8728 said:
any help would be great as i am ready to smash this phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nothing comes to mind that wouldn't have been solved by everything you've already done... Maybe you will have to buy a new modem?
Just another random thing that might work... try adding a different Google account to your S4A and downloading the streaming apps through that Google account and see if that solves the issue. I believe that specific Google accounts can be limited by developer's based on an auth code that I think is associated with your Google account. Idk why you might be limited, and it seems extremely coincidental that you would be limited by several different developers/provides at the same time, unless Google is for some reason responsible. Please note that I know little about this particular thing so it's a complete stab in the dark but it just might work.
not sure how or why this worked, but maybe it will help someone in the future.
i decided to scan my available wireless networks in range from my phone again.... (not because i was going to mooch from a neighbor ) and noticed that my neighbor had a network labeled "lastname" and "lastname guest".
that got me thinking and reading about my router, i found out that i could set up a "guest" network as well, set it up, connected my phone and only my phone and everything works again, i have no idea why or what happened but it works for now

[Q] Chromecast with other countries and root ability

Hi, my brother will come from U.S and i asked for chromecast but he said chromecast wont work outside of U.S.
I'm living in Turkey and using airties n5440 router , probably chromecast will have newer firmware and can i root it ? if i can't for now(i read some threads,probably i won't be able to for now.), will be able to do that in a month or any other time??
if i can't use it in Turkey, i won't buy it.
And which services won't be available in here.. Can i use it basically transferring youtube video to it etc.?
I'm waiting for your replies. and if i can get that and root it. Maybe I can develop custom firmwares but i need rootable one and access content from here..
btw: how is the development status here?
Regards...
I believe YouTube will work. If Netflix works there it'll work too. And you'll probably be able to send your own video, photos and music to your chromecast with no problems. It's just what I think.
Newer chromecasts can't be rooted yet. Maybe in couple weeks someone finds a solution, maybe never.
extrem0 said:
I believe YouTube will work. If Netflix works there it'll work too. And you'll probably be able to send your own video, photos and music to your chromecast with no problems. It's just what I think.
Newer chromecasts can't be rooted yet. Maybe in couple weeks someone finds a solution, maybe never.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
netflix and netflix-like services doesn't work here.
but youtube works of course.. but its new device its chromecast so i'm not sure .
Chromecast itself will work fine, as long as your WiFi isn't using a channel that isn't allowed in the US (channel 13).
As you suspect, it's the services that may or may not work, because of regional restrictions on the service end.
The reason why people want root is to use a DNS redirector like UnblockUS, UnoTelly, etc so they can get content as if they were in the US (or elsewhere).
You already said YouTube works in Turkey, so that will work.
Netflix, as you said, will not work.
Hulu has regional restrictions so if Hulu works in your country, you will get your country's content.
HBO Go requires authentication with the cable provider to prove you are a subscriber, so it will not work for you.
Most likely Viki and the other services that don't do region checks will work.
See http://www.google.com/intl/en/chrome/devices/chromecast/apps.html

How to hack Chromecast so its not looking for internet??

Hi to All, I know this has nothing to do with phones, but there might just be someone here who can solve this anyway
My problem is that I live in an area in th Philippines, where Globe telecom is the only solution for internet, and a very unstable one. Sometimes the speed is all the way down to 80Kbps and sometimes it goes to 0.
This makes using a Chromecast very dificult, it's possible to use when the speed is fine, but a sudden drop in speed sends chromecast in buffering mode. I tried to get Google to help, to no avail - they don't care.
I would like to have it not searching for internet, as 99.9% of the time i use it for internal casting(Offline)!
Anyone have a solution for this?
My Chromecast is 3rd gen. According to this page https://www.techthatworks.net/electronic/what-generation-chromecast-do-i-have and use Firmware(checked that in Home App) 1.49.230269
Hope to hear from you smart people soon as this is driving me nuts, I'm back to use USB stick and not all format are supported, so I have to convert and convert and so on, in order to watch the clips.
Thank you in advance
Jan
Moderator: could you move the thread to the chromecast forum? Thank you
Peppe89 said:
Is it legal?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi Peppe, why would it be illegal, I paid for the device - its mine I just want it to stop looking for the internet all the time, and do what it was bought for -casting.
Not possible, it's a real design flaw of the chromecast. I have slow internet and use it for internal casting too, very frustrating. Maybe get a bluray player or a roku they are better.
Thank you
SublimeFoxTheater
seem that Admin can close this one then
Hi, why should it not be possible? port or ipforwarding, tunneling etc? dont know how this device is working... but as its networking.. there should be a kind of way
nox23523 said:
Hi, why should it not be possible? port or ipforwarding, tunneling etc? dont know how this device is working... but as its networking.. there should be a kind of way
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The 3rd gen Chromecast will not boot or function if it can't hit Google's servers at boot. If it looses general internet connection, it will go to a "I've lost my brains" type of screen and not let you do anything. For a Chromecast, the internet connection is sadly required even if you're just mirroring locally.

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