Multi-Zone Presentations
Tip
This tutorial video outlines the basic steps for creating multi-zone presentations.Â
In a multi-zone presentation, BrightAuthor divides the screen into rectangles called zones, allowing you to create a different playlist for each zone. BrightAuthor provides a number of multi-zone templates. You can choose one of the system templates or create your own (see the Customizing Zone Layouts page for more details). You can also edit the zone layout at any time after selecting a template.
In multi-zone presentations, the zone type restricts the media and state types that can be included in the zone. The color-coded key at the bottom of the Template window shows the available zone types. The following list describes the available content types for each zone type:
Images: Displays images and HTML. You can include multiple Images zones in a presentation.
Ticker: Displays RSS feeds or pre-defined text strings. You can include multiple Ticker zones in a presentation.
Clock: Displays the time or date. You can include multiple Clock zones in a presentation.
Video or Images: Displays images, video, and HTML (can also play audio files).
Video Only: Displays video.
Audio Only: Plays audio. You can include multiple Audio Only zones in a presentation.
Enhanced Audio: Plays audio in a cross-faded playlist. You can include only one Enhanced Audio zone in a presentation.
Background Image: Places an image or media feed in the background of your presentation. All other zones appear on top of this zone.
Video Zone Restrictions
On Series 4 and earlier players, BrightSign XT, 4K, and XD models can decode two videos simultaneously, while HD and LS models can only decode a single video (this count can be expanded using Mosaic Mode). Also, the Background Image zone uses a video decoder to display an image. This leads to the following zone restrictions:
XTx44, XTx43, 4Kx42, XTx34, XDx33, XDx32, XDx30: You can include two Video or Images zones, two Video Only zones, one of each, or one of these and a Background Image zone.
HDx24, LS424, HDx23, LS423, HO523, HDx22, LSx22, HDx20: You can include a single Video or Images zone, Video Only zone, or Background Image zone.
Note
If you enable Dolby Vision on the XTx44, the presentation can only contain a single video-enabled zone (Video Only, Video or Images, or Background Image).
Creating a New ProjectÂ
To create a new multi-zone presentation, navigate to File > New Presentation.
Main
Save as: Enter a name for the presentation project.
Where: Click Browse to select the folder where you want to save the presentation project.
BrightSign model: Select the target player model for the presentation. This will determine the options available when creating the presentation in the Edit tab.
Connector type: Select the video connector type that connects the player to the display: HDMI®, VGA, or Component.
Screen resolution: Choose a resolution that matches the native resolution of your monitor. You can view all available screen resolutions in this page.
Note
You can output a composite signal to a converter by selecting the "HDMI" or "Component" Connector type and choosing one of the available composite video modes. See this FAQ for more information on generating component and composite signals.
Monitor Orientation: Select a monitor orientation for your presentation:
Landscape: Content is not rotated.
Portrait – bottom on left: Content is rotated counter-clockwise 90 degrees. Select this option if the bottom of the monitor is on the left when it is portrait oriented.
Portrait – bottom on right: Content is rotated clockwise 90 degrees. Select this option if the bottom of the monitor is on the right when it is portrait oriented.
Advanced
Force Resolution: Check this box to have the player output the selected Screen resolution even if the display reports over HDMI/VGA that it does not support this resolution. If this box is unchecked, the player will attempt to use the selected Screen resolution first, but will then fall back to the highest resolution supported by the display if it is unsupported.
Full resolution graphics: Check this box to enable full-resolution graphics for the selected Screen resolution. When this box is checked, the graphics plane (images, text, HTML animations, etc.) is rendered at the same size as the video output, rather than being upscaled to the output resolution after rendering. This option is only available for certain video modes larger than 1920x1200; all smaller video modes use full-resolution graphics automatically. This setting is subject to additional restrictions based on the resolution and player model–see this page for details.
Enable YCbCr 10-bit output: Check this box to output a 10-bit color video signal to the connected display. See the video encoding page for more details on supported 4K color spaces and bit depths.
Video zone configuration: Determine how video resources will be divvied up in the presentation:Â
Standard: You can have one or two video zones (depending on whether your player model supports dual decode), and these zones can play video files up to the maximum resolution (either HD or 4K) supported by your player model.
Mosaic: You can have more than two video zones. The maximum number of video zones depends on the Maximum content resolution setting in the Edit > Layout tab: The smaller the maximum resolution, the more video zones you can add. Mosaic mode is not supported on the LS423, LS422, XDx30, or HDx20.
Monitor overscan:Â Select an overscan setting to determine how the content fills the display screen.Â
No overscan – use full screen: Displays content to the edge of the video signal.
Overscan – action safe: Restricts the display area to a size that is compatible with most displays.
Overscan – title safe: Restricts the display area to a size that is much smaller than the generated video signal.
Click Create when you are finished configuring the presentation. The Template window will open.
Selecting a Template
Use the View dropdown list to choose between "System Templates" and "User Defined Templates" (see the Customizing Zone Layouts section to learn more about creating User Defined Templates). Select a multi-zone template you wish to use and click Choose—Remember that you can edit the zone layout at any time after choosing a template.
Adding Content to Zones
To add content to your zones, first designate a folder on your computer as your Media Library. This will make it easy to drag and drop image, video, and audio files into a zone playlist from a scrollable list of thumbnails.
Under Media Library, select the files tab.
Click to open the file browser.
Navigate to the folder where your content is stored.
Click OK.
Use the drop down menu under Zone to select a zone, then add media files to the zone by dragging files from the Media Library to the playlist area. You can do the following when adding media files:
Select a series of adjacent media files – Hold the Shift key as you select the files in the Media Library.
Select a group of non-adjacent files – Hold the Ctrl key as you select the files in the Media Library.
Refresh the Media Library – Click . This will update the Media Library with any changes to the corresponding folder on your computer.
Move up to the parent directory of the current folder – Click .
Move to a sub-directory of the current folder – Click a file thumbnail in the Media Library.
Editing the Zone Playlist
Once you've added media files to a zone, you can modify it by doing any of the following:
Remove an item from the playlist – Click an item in the playlist area and press the Delete or Backspace key.
Change the order in which an item plays – Click and drag an item to a new position in the playlist.
Rename the playlist – Click Edit in the upper-right corner of the playlist area.
Change the playlist view – Click the list/tile icon in the top-right of the playlist area to change the playlist view. Switching to a list view allows you to see the parameters of all media items and states in the playlist.
Replace media files in the playlist – Go to File > Replace media files. The Replace Media Files window allows you to replace files within media states without having to drag and drop individual files. This is useful if you need to update a large number of media files in your playlist or if you want to ensure the playlist order is preserved.
Replacement Media Folder: Click Browse to select the folder that contains the files you want to add. This can be the same folder as your Media Library, or another folder.
Preserve state names: Check this box to preserve the names of the media states in the playlist. If this box is unchecked, the current media states will automatically take on the names of the new media files.
Presentation Media Files: For each file listed under Current Media Files, select a new file using the dropdown list beneath Replacement Media File.
Editing Media Playback Options
To edit the playback settings of a media item, double-click the thumbnail in the playlist area (or right-click and select Edit), then choose the settings you want to apply to the selected item:
Image files: Specify the following:
Time on Screen: The amount of time (in seconds) that the image displays in a zone before transitioning to the next item.
Transition: The transition effect that occurs from the previous media item to this image.
Transition Duration: The duration (in seconds) of the transition effect.
Video files: Specify the Volume of the video.
Audio files: Specify the Volume of the audio track.
To edit settings for multiple items, press the Ctrl key and select items in the playlist. On the menu bar, select Edit > Selected Items, and then choose the settings you want to apply to the selected items. Note that the selected items must all be the same media or state type for this to work.
Next Steps
Now that you've created your multi-zone presentation, save it by navigating to File > Save [project name] (make sure you have the Edit tab selected). Then, do any of the following:
Publish the presentation – Click the Publish tab and select your publishing method. See the Publishing Presentations section for more instructions.
Export the presentation – Navigate to File > Export [project name]. This saves the presentation project as a package that can be opened by BrightAuthor instances on other computers.
Save the presentation using a new name or location – Navigate to File > Save [project name] As.
Create another presentation – Navigate to File > New Presentation.