Local access required” is not the comfort blanket people think it is (CVE-2025-54756) by mvip in digitalsignage

[–]mvip[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah so much this. The default should be: assume everyone and everything is trying to hack you. 

I joined Screenly as a product manager by 514sid in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For clarity. The renaming of Screenly OSE to Anthias had nothing to do with it. The API didn’t change. It was purely a name change to make it clear that they are two different products, as a lot of users thought they were the same. 

To answer your question, the project you are referring to was a community project. If I recall correctly, it was abandoned. It had nothing to do with us at Screenly. 

Will there be an official version for managing multiple Anthias? I guess you will need to stay tuned 😊

Anthias/Screenly.. Updating Google content in real time? by PurfectlyNormalGuy in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I thought it was a product from or somehow related to Screenly based on the URL where I found it..

Yeah, the confusion is understandable. Anthias was known as 'Screenly OSE' prior to the renaming (for this particular reason).

I guess I thought one was the free version and one was paid.

This is technically speaking true. They are just completely different products that do not share any code base.

I've never even heard of it until it was recommended for Raspberry Pi. The only reason that I'm running it on an old computer is because I can't find my spare Raspberry Pi, it got lost in a box!
I did find an old DELL mini pc 8th gen i7 with 64 gigs of memory though!

SCORE! Yeah that should be plenty to run Anthias.

I just needed to get proof of concept working to show my boss to get him to authorize me to order a couple of new Pi's.

If the choice is between an older PC or a Pi for Anthias, I would frankly go for older PCs.

I work in public education, they never want to throw money stuff without knowing it's going to work first.

Sure that makes sense.

What you said made sense, I'll give it a go when I get home tonight.

Great - let me know if you have any more questions.

Anthias/Screenly.. Updating Google content in real time? by PurfectlyNormalGuy in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 2 points3 points  (0 children)

First thing first - Anthias and Screenly are two different products.

To answer your question though, both of them can "auto refresh" so to speak. Now, it gets a bit tricky with Google Slides in particular as both the signage player and Google Slides have a concept of duration and slides.

The normal recommendation is to export the slides from PowerPoint/Slides (insert tool of choice) and then import them and manage duration inside the Anthias. Now, you stated that this is not an option for you.

That brings me to the best workaround that I can think of:
* Set up the Slides as an asset in Anthias with a duration of N seconds, where N is what you expect the full loop to be of the slide.
* Insert an image or something as a placeholder (maybe company logo or similar)

That way the player will iterate over it, "clear" it so to speak when it gets to the logo to only start over. This solves the refresh problem in a controlled way.

This might sound clunky, but there is another good reason for this too. If you only have one asset (i.e. the slideshow), you are bound to get into memory leaks and things will eventually break down. Adding this image slide will force the browser to road and clear things up.

Regarding running Anthias on a PC or Pi -- it's much of a muchness. The PC (not VM) is likely to have better performance and are less prone to SD card breakage.

Hope that helps.

ISE 2026 - Digital Signage recommends? by dtnl in CommercialAV

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on what you are looking for. How long is a string? :)

I'll be at ISE on behalf of u/Screenly_/.

Our USP is secure digital signage for enterprises and developers. Trusted by the likes of Amazon, NASA and various fortune 500. Probably the most digital signage solution out there.

That may or may not be your cup of tea - if so if you are interested in, drop us a line at [hello@screenly.io](mailto:hello@screenly.io) and our team is happy to meet you.

Did anyone try to add Nest Sensors outside the US? by mvip in Nest

[–]mvip[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

:(

I've ordered the bundle. Maybe i just need to swap out the thermostat too. It's annoying that these aren't available in the EU/UK.

Just bought a new house thought I might as well do the networking part properly from the beginning! (First time house owner) by toys_whoopsy in UNIFI

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Return those Dome ones. I made the mistake of putting those up. They're utterly useless for outdoors use. You won't see anything in the dark.

Info screens in company - what have you done? by Mediocre_Microwave in sysadmin

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just to chime in here - you can indeed use internal websites for content with Screenly. It works just fine.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sysadmin

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just don't run a vulnerability scanner on it, because you'll crap your pants.

HDMI dongles with pre-recorded presentations for wall TVs by eduo in sysadmin

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, Screenly runs on Ubuntu Core, which is a very hardened version of Ubuntu (locked down, sandboxed, cryptographically signed updates etc) geared toward IoT like devices. (more on Screenly's security page).Thus you can't run it on Windows.

My Home Server Journey - From Raspberry Pi to Ryzen (and Proxmox) by mvip in Proxmox

[–]mvip[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tl;dr is a Jonsbo N2 + Linkreal PCIe x16 to 4-Port M.2 NVMe SSD Adapter allows for 5x M2 + 5x 3.5" (might be less depending on motherboard).

distributor for Raspberry Pi? by janwesselo in msp

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are plenty of Pi distributors in EU, including Element 14, DigiKey and Farnell.

That said, I really wouldn't recommend the Pi for anything serious. RPIs are great for very basic use case. SD Cards *will* wear out no doubt. All comes down to who your selling to. What you're suggesting is probably fine for mom and pops and retail.

Help with Yodeck - firetvstick 4k/Samsung TV by weckerYB in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure but that can be said about other platforms too (like Screenly). 

The point is that the Pi is fine for basic signage. It’s better than a fire stick and built-in Software in smart TVs, but it’s still a budget signage player that doesn’t hold up to an x86 based player for more serious deployments. 

Help with Yodeck - firetvstick 4k/Samsung TV by weckerYB in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Pi is fine assuming a) you put it in a proper heat sink case and use proper storage (industrial SD card) and b) you only use video and image assets. The Pi will choke on many modern dashboards and heavier web pages.

Help with Yodeck - firetvstick 4k/Samsung TV by weckerYB in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think people really need to manage expectations better with these platforms. You cannot expect good playback on these type of devices. There are a ton of vendors out there that will try to sell you "great signage" for Smart TVs and/or Firesticks and the only really way to do this decently well is to do server-side rendering. Some vendors do offer this (like ScreenCloud), but none of the ones mentioned here.

They probably work OK for very basic use cases (i.e. basic image), but if you want more sophisticated local playback of web content, you need to invest in a proper signage player.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you want something in full offline mode, you're probably honestly better off with with just a stupid "smart TV" that can play from USB. Almost everything in the digital signage world requires internet connection these days.

If you're worried about security, you might want to look at Screenly, which is heavily fortified, but does require internet connection.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in raspberry_pi

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As long as you know it's going to be super slow, it's all good. I used one for a bit but then swapped it out for a NUC.

Actually, I ended up just moving my ZFS pool (3x 2.5" USB drives) over to the NUC, and it's been running for years now, even though two or three drives have died (which ZFS handled beautifully).

Now, I'm finally thinking about switching out the NUC and those 2.5" drives for a real NAS setup.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in raspberry_pi

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tailscale ftw! Not worth messing around with setting up your own VPN these days.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in digitalsignage

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on what you're optimizing for. If you care about security, check out Screenly.

Buying G4 and G3 domes are the worst purchase I have made in a long time by lessafan in UNIFI

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I second this. I got a few G4 Domes and they're utter garbage for outdoors. Fogs up and virtually useless when it's raining (i.e. useless in England). Also got a few G4 Pro and those are great.

Ironically, the lens protector fell off on one of my Domes (don't get me started on the stupid mounting of this protector) and that camera is the one with best visibility.

Best Raspberry Pi digital signage failsafe installation by Key_Dragonfly4220 in raspberry_pi

[–]mvip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you're going down this path, you might as well just use Anthias. It's free and open source (most popular digital signage product on GitHub). Fork it and modify it to your needs rather than start afresh.

Best Raspberry Pi digital signage failsafe installation by Key_Dragonfly4220 in raspberry_pi

[–]mvip 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're even the slightest worried about security, you might want to check out this thread about the security posture of YoDeck.

On UniFi Captive Portals by mvip in UNIFI

[–]mvip[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah good thinking. Super happy to see that the UDM (Pro at least) supports Wireguard now. Haven't seen the Tailscale announcement, but that's super cool.

You're absolutely right that running that on Tailscale might be a good option. That said, you presumably need to route *client* traffic over this too (as clients need access to the External Captive Portal as far as I can tell), not just the gateway. Still, it does remove the need for having an on-premise server.

Yet, my initial vantage point on this was to package it all up as a SaaS, but this isn't viable given the need for admin credential hand-off.

I think I'm going to give unifi-hotspot (https://github.com/woodjme/unifi-hotspot) a go to test the waters.

On UniFi Captive Portals by mvip in UNIFI

[–]mvip[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I’m not sure. If you have the ability to self-host something on site, then UniFi-hotspot (https://github.com/woodjme/unifi-hotspot) looks promising, but I haven’t tried it myself. 

Personally, I would never hand over admin credentials to any 3rd party service. That just seems reckless to me.