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Please, help.
Sony Bravia kdl-60nx720 doesn't see files on external HD.
I formatted HDD into exFat.
Movie file is 16.3 Gb large. 1980x1024 Progressive. Converted on iMac to *.mp4
Аnd photoes are .jpg files (2400x3600)
The movie is in parent directory the photoes are in "Photo" folder
I formatted HDD into exFat as manual on TV says. HDD was NTFS and TV didn't connect. After I formatted to exFAT (according to manual on TV screen) SONY managed to connect HDD it sees name of movie file, name of a folder, but says "photo" folder is empty but its not.
Hi there
I have just done a bit more digging: exFAT is supported under the specifications (so thats not it) - sorry for the confusion before hand.
Can you confirm that the files that you are trying to play, conform to the following:
In regards to JPG files
- JPEG (JPEG format files with the extension “.jpg” and conforming to DCF 2.0 or Exif 2.21)
In regards to MP4 files:
What codec is the MP4 file using (as it needs to be either AVC or MPEG4, not others)
Cheers
Maybe it's stupid hint, but when you say that you "see movie file and the folder photo instead is empty", are you sure that you selected to see "photo" and not "video"? Unfortunately all sony equipments ask for the content you want to see before you navigate it and you see only that type of content ...
So just to confirm, when you goto the Video section (in the home menu), and drill down the folders to where the mp4 file should be, is it not displayed? I cannot see any reason why this file would not be displaying in the video menu.
(On a side note, the bitrate might be too high. I have the NX723 TV, and experienced juddering when the bitrate was more that 13mbps, as the bitrate does jump in action scenes etc0
I surrended to try accessing all kind of video file directly from the TV and opted for let it read via a DLNA server. Using serviio (or homestream SONY version) I can play everything from the TV.
Hi there
So you can see the file, but just wont play - therefore the file itself is in question (in regards to compatibility with the TV).
My suggestion is to re-encode the file, but at a lower bitrate. Set a maximum of 8,000kbps to start with (and dont use variable bitrate). Do this as a test anyhow and see if that works.
I havent played files directly to my TV for quite sometime now, and have experienced many problems when playing videos. In the end I purchased a dedicated network media player, but it is an expensive solution (but well worth it).
You can use Homestream or Serviio or other DLNA server software as rooobb suggested above - but very high bitrate files will still let you down (even though the avg bitrate is say 20mbps, it can quite easily jump many times that in fast action areas, totally flooding any buffer that the TV/network can cope with)
Anyway, thats the only suggestion that I have at the moment.
Cheers
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