- HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MOVIE
- HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MP4
- HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MANUAL
1920x1080 pixel images will show fine on a 1280x720 pixel screen, but huge camera size images can be rather slow loading each one. You probably want to size a copy of your JPG images for the screen presentation. You can provide any larger size image, but it has to be resampled to fit on the screen, which takes a little time, can run slow. Just plug it in, and the HDTV senses it and provides a play menu. The thumbdrive-type "flash drives" seem most convenient, but a camera memory card in a reader with a cable works fine too.
HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MOVIE
The Western Digital streaming player also has USB, and plays more types of movie files well (and JPG), but it's not my favorite player (it did not show Amazon Prime).Ĭopy the JPG files to the USB memory stick, just plug it into the TV USB port, and it can show HD files, not limited in the way old standard DVD players are limited. You use the streaming players remote to control it.
HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MP4
mp4 is a fine solution if you can create them (for example, with PowerDirector). My experience is that a Roku 3 player shows JPG and movies very well. HD size images will show well on a HDTV, but an old regular SD TV only shows SD. Or most HDTV models surely have at least one extra HDMI port, and then a good way to show movie files from a USB memory stick is to use a HDMI streaming player (like Roku 3), one that has a USB port on it (which shows JPG files there too). Creating a Blu-ray DVD would show movies. The HDTV USB port does NOT show movie files (at least no TV I have seen does from USB). I've had excellent results with Sony and Samsung TVs, but not all models have a USB port. Plug in the memory stick and the TV will pop up a menu to show regular JPG files directly, individually or in an automated slide show fashion. However, many HD television sets now (above Economy models) have a USB port, and a flash memory card can very conveniently show High Def slide shows that way. Any larger images sized for HDTV will be resampled smaller, and shown at low definition (from an old standard definition DVD player).ĭVD images sized for HDTV requires Blu-ray players, Blu-ray burners, and Blu-ray DVD media. HOWEVER, an old style standard DVD player can only output the old Standard TV signal (not HDTV), so the old player must resample too-large images to be no larger than about 640x480 pixels (which is seen as a normal older Standard Definition size image). The DVD player will show any size of JPG image given to it (large images can be slow).
HANDHELD DIGITAL PICTURE VIEWER WITH LARGE SCREEN MANUAL
See your DVD player's manual about showing JPG images, for the media disk types it will play, and how many JPG files on the media that it can show. Old DVD players can show JPG image files on the TV from a regular data CD disk. There is a really big division here, between older DVD players before HDTV, and with the new system of Blu-ray DVD players for HDTV. Some older wide-screens were 1366x768 pixels.
The only tip about taking movies is that movies are wider than tall, so it is best to hold your phone camera horizontal for movies. This is not about movies, it is about preparing JPG still images to show on TV screens.