Media players will do what you need. That's correct they are almost always formatted for Windows, so you may have to reformat your thumb drives and you'll definitely have the 4gb file size limit (usually 10-20 minutes of video is the max), so if you have long vides youll have to break them up into smaller files - and then you get a dumb loading graphic between each file.
There are ways to hack the media players to remove the "play" or "loading" or file name graphics at the start of each file / loop, but I've never done it, only heard rumors. I have also used an iPod touch to do what you are doing, but it takes a bit of messing with the settings because it's not really made to just loop videos all day long. Either way, have a plan for maintenance because no digital player will work perfectly for days/weeks/months on end and at some point it will freeze or crash and you'll need someone there to reset or restart it or whatever. Good luck! On Monday, June 20, 2016, Jason Halprin <[email protected]> wrote: > Depending on the monitor, you may be able to play file for looping > straight from a USB thumb drive. I would only do this if you are able to > spend a few days researching and teching the file. Also, in my experience, > you would have to use a drive that is formatted for FAT32, meaning the file > size is limited to 4GB. I've had some trouble setting this up remotely, as > it can be hard to get the codec/container/bitrate set exactly as need be > with presenters who don't know exactly what they're working with. > > Otherwise, what David said. > > -Jason Halprin > > Jason Halprin > [email protected] <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');> > jasonhalprin.com <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');> >
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