- May 23, 2002
- 16,928
- 8
- 81
So we're trying to come up with the easiest way to use multiple (2 - 4) TVs as displays that will show a website on them. However, we don't want to have to dedicate a computer to each TV to run the show.
Whatever it is would connect to the TVs via wifi connection.
We thought we could use the built in web browser on the TVs that we have but the browser is pretty crappy and doesn't display the pages properly.
We thought about using Chromecasts and then using a single computer to see if we can cast to 4 TVs at once using different browser profiles but then if the chromecast shuts down or the PC reboots we have to go set it all up again. And it still relies on a computer to run it.
We thought about trying one of those Android-on-a-stick things that we could plug directly into the TV. Assuming we can set those to boot up directly to the browser and use our site as the home page, that would seem to be a great option. Problem is there are dozens of those stick devices and I can't find much on them to know what's reliable and decent and what's not.
Anyone know anything about the Stick devices to know which are good or bad?
Anyone have any other ideas that we could look into?
Thanks.
--TVs are not near each other. They are on different floors of a building. Cabling will not be run to the TVs other than power.
--Website is a dynamic page that updates itself with realtime data. This is not a static loop that runs.
--Internal Web Browser on the TVs does not work for this application and it cannot be upgraded or changed.
--Apple TV does not have a browser and we don't have iOS devices to cast to them.
--Chromecast says it is incompatible with our network as we have enterprise authentication which is not supported
--Android-on-a-Stick devices don't work with the Chrome Browser but seem to sort of work with Firefix for Android. (Still testing)
--Will try a Raspberry Pi with a browser on it to see if that will work
Whatever it is would connect to the TVs via wifi connection.
We thought we could use the built in web browser on the TVs that we have but the browser is pretty crappy and doesn't display the pages properly.
We thought about using Chromecasts and then using a single computer to see if we can cast to 4 TVs at once using different browser profiles but then if the chromecast shuts down or the PC reboots we have to go set it all up again. And it still relies on a computer to run it.
We thought about trying one of those Android-on-a-stick things that we could plug directly into the TV. Assuming we can set those to boot up directly to the browser and use our site as the home page, that would seem to be a great option. Problem is there are dozens of those stick devices and I can't find much on them to know what's reliable and decent and what's not.
Anyone know anything about the Stick devices to know which are good or bad?
Anyone have any other ideas that we could look into?
Thanks.
--TVs are not near each other. They are on different floors of a building. Cabling will not be run to the TVs other than power.
--Website is a dynamic page that updates itself with realtime data. This is not a static loop that runs.
--Internal Web Browser on the TVs does not work for this application and it cannot be upgraded or changed.
--Apple TV does not have a browser and we don't have iOS devices to cast to them.
--Chromecast says it is incompatible with our network as we have enterprise authentication which is not supported
--Android-on-a-Stick devices don't work with the Chrome Browser but seem to sort of work with Firefix for Android. (Still testing)
--Will try a Raspberry Pi with a browser on it to see if that will work
Last edited: