
This guide explains the steps for putting a movie (DVD, MKV, AVI) onto the Nabi Tablet.

This guide explains the steps for putting a movie (DVD, MKV, AVI) onto the Nabi Tablet.

New in MovieGallery 1.4 is the ability to connect it to our free MP4 Streaming Server application. This guide will help you in getting things set-up, so you can start streaming your videos rather than having to copy them over whenever you want to watch them.

If you use an Android phone or tablet and use it with for watching the occasional movie or TV episode, MovieGallery is for you. Skim through the movies on your NOOKtablet, Xoom, Thrive, Transformer Prime, Galaxy Nexus or anything else running Android 2.2 and higher (Froyo, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich) by using cover images…

For some reason, this week, I have had quite a few contact me on using DVD Catalyst 4 with some form of “Digital Copy” file. Either regarding a Digital Copy movie that came with a DVD or Bluray purchase, a movie purchased and downloaded through iTunes or Amazon’s video service or one that was given…

Still sold out nearly everywhere, the VTech InnoTab Learning Tablet has quickly become one of the most popular learning devices on the market. Aside from using the educational game cartridges, it is also capable of playing movies. Unfortunately, to get movies to play on the InnoTab you need a special media format converter in order…

In order to make the conversion as easy as possible, DVD Catalyst 4 uses “video player device profiles” for different phones and tablets.

If you want to put movies on your new NOOKtablet, just follow the steps in this guide.

While the Kindle Fire is actually quite capable of playing video files at very high quality (way higher than what the screen is actually capable of displaying), there is a lot of talk on the web about the limited (8GB) storage space available. Adding to that a maximum file-size of 2GB per movie results in…

After playing with the Kindle Fire a bit, I’ve noticed that it does not like video files that are larger than 2GB. Standard DVD conversions work just fine, as well as HD-sized content (I tried up to 1080p), but if the files are larger than 2GB, the Kindle Fire will not play them. A 720p…