Quantcast

Forums | MacLife

You are not logged in.

#1 2009-04-22 1:18 pm

MaloGFX
Super Chapin
From: lacausa
Registered: 2002-12-10
Posts: 783
Website

Media Display Software?

Hey guys, I'm looking to do something like RippleTV http://www.rippletv.com/ they have some type of software that displays what ever media on a screen, I'm looking into doing the same for the high school I work at.

Any ideas what type of software they use? or something I can use?


Thank you


15" MacBook Pro, 4GB RAM, 260GB

Offline

 

#2 2009-04-22 2:09 pm

dv
Negusa Negest
Moderator
From: Minneapolis, MN
Registered: 1999-08-30
Posts: 18026

Re: Media Display Software?

iTunes works pretty well.

iPhoto? Save as a movie and drop into an iTunes playlist. iMovie? Export and drop into an iTunes playlist.


"Now commences the process of cutting off the head, which generally takes from an hour to an hour and a half by an expert workman with a sharp blade." -Reuben Delano, Wanderings and Adventures

Offline

 

#3 2009-06-27 1:40 am

pastor macman
Member
From: Bakersfield, CA
Registered: 2000-07-28
Posts: 805
Website

Re: Media Display Software?

Being a church, we are familiar with quite a few pieces of software for getting media onto a screen. (sometimes called worship presentation software)

These software options almost always feature the ability to set a sequence of media to display in a loop. Unlike something like powerpoint or keynote, they are designed to be manipulated while the show is running on a second screen. You don't have to cease the playback to change things around. You can dynamically jump from one slide to another and even edit text and media while another piece of media is playing.

We've tried quite a few programs and have settled on ProPresenter by Renewed Vision. You can find it here:
www.renewedvision.com
It's only $800 for a site license that you can install and simultaneously use on as many computers as you want. ($400 for a single use lic) It is Mac only and has a ton of features. You can display stills (jpg, png, tiff, psd, pic) video (mov, avi, mpg, mp4) and audio (aiff, mp3) You can drag and drop songs right from iTunes into playlists in ProPresenter. You can even cue up a specific section of a DVD on cue.

They even just recently made available an iphone app ($5) that you can use to control playback over wifi on the same network. With the addition of their Advanced Module ($+200) you can output through a professional video card (like blackmagic or AJA) or through firewire. Or you can output to a Matrox triple-head or dual-head and either span it's output across the multiple monitors or output different portions of media to the different monitors. You can have a media clip on one monitor, just text on a different monitor and text over media on a third monitor.

I promise you I am not affiliated with them at all. I'm just a very satisfied customer.

I don't know if this helps you or not. That other software you referenced seemed to be able to pull it's media from a database on the fly. I don't know if that was a feature you were looking for or if you just wanted media display software.


Bondage to Spiritual Faith; Spiritual Faith to Courage; Courage to Freedom;
Freedom to Abundance; Abundance to Selfishness; Selfishness to Complacency;
Complacency to Apathy; Apathy to Fear; Fear to Dependency; Dependency back to Bondage

Offline

 

#4 2009-07-24 2:37 am

Nefarious
Tuning Fork
Moderator
From: 45°22"N 84°57"W
Registered: 2002-09-30
Posts: 7994

Re: Media Display Software?

Pamela wrote:

hey i was going through this article thought of sharing it with u guys!

A few days ago USA Today published an article on out-of-home media company RippleTV, who places free digital signs into regional/local chains with a focus on local advertising. The firm is up to about 300 locations all in the southern California region right now, mostly consisting of about 200 Coffee Bean stores and 100 Jiffy Lubes, though the article noted that the QSR Jack in the Box just joined, which could increase their footprint considerably.

Demonstrating somebody's lack of understanding about the out-of-home advertising market (and it's unclear whether it's USA Today's or RippleTV's), noted competitors include, "Gas Station TV, which puts TV ads on gas station pumps... Wal-Mart TV Network lets advertisers run messages in the retailer's stores... [and] Captivate, [who] shows news and information to workers in lobbies and elevators." It's a pretty big leap to assume that your spot for a local dry cleaners running in a selection of Coffee Bean stores is really in direct competition for advertising dollars with a nationwide spot for some P&G product running on Wal-Mart TV, but there you go. Actually, that idea might deserve a bit more explanation: it's easy to assume that alternative out-of-home media compete with each other for ad dollars. However, this isn't really the case at all. Today, when a dollar gets spent on some funky out-of-home promotion, a digital signage campaign, or anything else nontraditional and below-the-line (in marketer speak), that dollar is almost certainly being taken away from TV or print ads, both of which have shown declining effectiveness in recent years (TV more so than many print publications).

That nitpick aside, I thought the most interesting part of the article was a description of Ripple's business model:

    Ripple offers advertisers a self-serve set-up. Companies register at Ripple's website — rippletv.com — then create or upload their image ad. The process is similar to posting videos or pictures at sites such as YouTube and MySpace. They can also can manage campaigns online, choosing stores where they want to advertise.

    ...

    Advertising rates start at $18 weekly for a local Jiffy Lube to $40 weekly for a single Coffee Bean. They rise when more locations are added. Unlike on TV, the ads are guaranteed to run every five minutes.

    Ripple's deal with businesses promises a free 50-inch LCD flat-screen TV and entertainment for customers. The Ripple network shows information from CBS, E Entertainment Network, ESPN and Yahoo.

    The businesses also share in the advertising revenue, and dictate which kinds of companies can be promoted in their stores. For instance, Jack in the Box asked that rival hamburger chains be excluded.

    Ripple's challenge is making money. The company isn't yet profitable, and its rates are so low, it will take some time to turn a profit.

The idea of scaling price structures with the number of screens is obviously not new, but the article almost makes it sound as if individual locations become more valuable when other same-branded locations are added to the available pool, which doesn't make any sense. More than likely I'm just reading that wrong, or it was incorrectly described. That would make sense if customers were buying chain-wide and were paying on some kind of CPM basis, but it sounds like the ads are being paid for more like POP displays or posters, which is on a per-location, per-use basis (which certainly makes the most sense to me).

Has anybody used this network? Can anybody clarify the payment schedule and any anecdotal performance metrics?

Quoted.   another signature spam probably.

Offline

 

Board footer

Powered by PunBB 1.2.6
© Copyright 2002–2005 Rickard Andersson