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Provideoplayer system requirements
Provideoplayer system requirements











provideoplayer system requirements
  1. #Provideoplayer system requirements full
  2. #Provideoplayer system requirements pro
  3. #Provideoplayer system requirements mac

There is a multitude of display technologies available today, and we want you to be able to take advantage of any of them. Additional options include specifying a default layer for all content played within a playlist ensuring that content made for a specific screen is never played anywhere else. Because the target sets that you build are global throughout the application, you can easily change target sets on any given layer at any time and save this mapping as part of the cue so content always plays exactly the way you want it. This allows for fine-tuned design of content across rotated screens, screens of various shapes, and odd aspect ratios.

#Provideoplayer system requirements full

The media triggered in any layer can be mapped to one or more screens… either full screen or within one or more targets (rectangle, polygon, circle, bezier path). That means you can connect as many displays as your computer can handle, including graphics-direct (DVI, HDMI, VGA), broadcast (SDI), network-based (NDI, Syphon) outputs, or any combination therein. PVP3 is a multi-screen, multi-layer video playback and processing tool. We set out to see if we could make a single product that would provide the tools needed for many productions when the complexity of more expensive solutions is unnecessary. ProVideoPlayer (PVP) is a Mac-based multi-screen media server application designed to play back and manipulate video across one or more screens.įor over a decade PVP has been powering multi-screen playback and video effects for live events and fixed installations, many times feeding video to expensive dedicated hardware (such as screen control systems) for further manipulation. Now I'm a freelancer and use PVP from time to time on my own gigs.ProVideoPlayer 3 for macOS - the standard for multi-screen media servers. I'm also Chris from the forums, so you'll see me there too. NAB Demo this year with some great info about PVP: ĭisclaimer, I used to work there. Recommended reading, primarily Brad's replies, in these forum threads: We'll be using two iMac Pros as the primary devices to drive the show. I think we're at 5 4K outputs right now because of the content and screens. We're going to be using several Blackmagic Teranex AV units to output 4k quad-link content for the Draft this year. It's fine if you're extremely scripted or triggering the same content on a regular basis, but that's not how I work. Usually I need quick access to a ton of content and an easy way to move it around between playlists or into new playlists. I hate the UI for it because I don't work in a linear form on shows. We could reproduce it with nothing more than Finder being open. Luckily we were already planning on using Stream Decks to control everything, so we didn't have to touch the mouse. We ran into it last year at the NFL Draft. I think it's an HDCP issue, so it may not always be a problem.

#Provideoplayer system requirements pro

There is a bug with the iMac Pro that causes the entire UI and outputs to stutter when you move the mouse under certain conditions. If you're looking at needing to do 4k more often, an iMac Pro would be better, but they also have some issues inherent to the hardware, unfortunately. If you go that route, max it out so that you get the best performance out of the mini.

provideoplayer system requirements

#Provideoplayer system requirements mac

To answer the technical side, yes, the Mac mini should be fine for multiple 1080 outputs, but not multiple 4k outputs.













Provideoplayer system requirements