Clarified to avoid some misconceptions about Screenly.

This commit is contained in:
Viktor Petersson
2012-08-11 23:15:03 +02:00
parent 29a09d132a
commit 0bf17eb4e8

View File

@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ Once installed, Screenly can view images, videos and websites on the screen. You
Here's how you add content to your Screenly box:
* Point your browser to the URL displayed on the screen at boot.
* Point your browser to the URL displayed on the screen at boot (from a different computer).
* Click 'Add asset.'
* Provide a name of the asset, the URL to the asset, and the asset type and click 'Submit.'
* Click 'Schedule asset.'
@@ -37,8 +37,8 @@ Note: If you don't have any server where you can make your asset available, you
## Requirements
* A Raspberry Pi (Model B).
* An SD Card (>2GB).
* A HDMI-cable.
* An SD Card (>4GB).
* An HDMI-cable.
* A network connection (with DHCP).
* A keyboard and mouse (only required for the installation).
* A monitor/TV that can view full HD (and has HDMI input).
@@ -64,7 +64,8 @@ Open a terminal-window (or SSH-session) and as the user 'pi' run:
Assuming everything went well, reboot your system. Screenly should now load.
Upon boot, Screenly's URL should show up on the screen (e.g. http://aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd:8080).
Upon boot, Screenly's management URL should show up on the screen (e.g. http://aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd:8080).
To manage the content, open up this URL **on a different computer**. Don't try to manage the content directly on the Raspberry Pi using a keyboard and mouse. That won't work.
## Supported media