No media player required: signage on hardware you already own
Why ChannelOS runs as a web page on the TV itself — no dedicated media player, no per-device license — and how channels, dayparting and self-updating screens work on hardware you already have.
A surprising amount of signage cost and complexity comes from one assumption: that every screen needs a dedicated media player device behind it, provisioned and licensed.
ChannelOS drops that assumption. The TV is the player. ChannelOS runs as a web page on the screen itself, so any device that renders a modern browser can be a managed sign.
Hardware you already own
Android TV, Google TV, webOS, Fire TV, a cheap browser-on-a-stick, or literally a laptop in kiosk mode — if it loads a web page, it pairs. There’s:
- No player box to purchase per screen.
- No app to sideload or keep updated on the TV.
- No per-device license to track.
You open play.channelos.tv, scan the code from your phone, and that screen is live. The cost of adding a screen is the cost of a TV you probably already have.
Screens that update themselves
Hardware you never touch is only good if it stays current. ChannelOS screens self-update: a paired TV quietly polls for new builds and reloads itself when one ships, with a loop-guard so it never gets stuck. And when you need to force it, the operator can trigger a remote reload straight from the board.
No ladders, no USB sticks, no walking the floor. The fleet keeps itself fresh.
Channels: one schedule, the whole fleet
Pushing a show to a single screen is the simple case. The powerful case is a channel — a named broadcast feed with a real timeline that many screens tune into.
Because what’s on a screen is derived from the channel schedule and the clock — never pushed screen by screen — one edit reaches every screen on that channel at once. That’s how a 20-screen network stays consistent without 20 separate updates.
Dayparting: the right content at the right time
Channels support dayparting: different content by time of day and day of week. A café shows a breakfast board until 11, lunch specials through the afternoon, and a dinner menu at night — set once, runs itself. Weekend hours differ from weekday hours automatically.
You can also take over a channel live — drop an urgent message onto every screen instantly — then let the normal schedule resume when you’re done.
The payoff
Strip out the player hardware and the per-device busywork, and signage stops being an IT project. You’re left with the part that matters: the right thing, on the right screen, at the right time — running on hardware you already own, updating itself, programmed once.
That’s signage the way it should have worked all along.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need a special media player box for ChannelOS?
- No. ChannelOS runs in the TV's own web browser. Any device that renders a modern web page — Android TV, Google TV, webOS, Fire TV, or a browser on an HDMI stick — can be a ChannelOS screen with no extra hardware.
- How do ChannelOS screens stay up to date?
- Screens self-update. A paired TV quietly polls for new builds and reloads itself, and operators can also trigger a remote reload from the board. You never have to touch the hardware to push an update.
- What is dayparting and does ChannelOS support it?
- Dayparting means showing different content at different times of day or days of week — for example a breakfast menu in the morning and dinner specials at night. ChannelOS supports it on channels: you set a weekday/weekend, by-hour schedule once and screens tune in automatically.
Your screen is two minutes away.
Open the player on a TV, scan the code, publish a show. Your first screen is free.