The Player Links and Files feature allows you to upload and attach files (or web links) to a member's roster record. This can be perfect for situations where you have permission forms, documents or other information that needs to be saved for each player. Each file or link can be made public (i.e. anyone on the team can view/download) or private (i.e. only the team managers can view/download). A member can only upload a file or link to their own profile, while a manager or administrator can upload a file to any team member profile. Player links and files can only be uploaded and viewed from the web application.

Apps where you can easily type things (e.g. mobile apps, the web app, and our website) will allow you to directly sign in to your Plex account. You can use any of the standard sign-in methods for a Plex account:


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Our big screen apps (such as Android TV, Apple TV, smart TVs, etc.) generally allow you to connect the app to your account by way of a 4-character link code. This allows you to connect to your account without having to laboriously enter login credentials via an on-screen keyboard or similar.

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The player url (player.vimeo.com) is used as the source within the Vimeo iframe. Most likely the video is accessible when visiting that URL because it is set to "Hide from vimeo.com" and is only playable when embedded. To prevent this from happening, the video's embed privacy should be set to domain-level so that it's only playable when embedded on specified domains.

When requesting /videos/516699168 the API returns a 404 likely because the auth token used with the request only has "public" scope and can only be used to get public data on Vimeo. Because the video has "Hide from vimeo.com" privacy it is not public, and the API cannot pull its metadata.

Don't worry - it's quick and painless! Just click below, and once you're logged in we'll bring you right back here and post your question. We'll remember what you've already typed in so you won't have to do it again.

Then go to Facebook and paste that link into the status box. It will then show the player. You can leave the link you pasted in the text field, or you can delete it and it will just show the player. Then when you hit post, people will see the player on Facebook.

Hey! We are a bunch of me and my friends are having the same exact problem. Whether we right click and copy the playlist URL, copy playlist link, OR copy embed code... the player won't show up in the facebook post or comments. Please advise! Thank you!

This does not work for me all the times, today I am trying to post our new EP and I am only getting the image and external link for spotify and no player? Last week our other EP the player was coming up on FB. Is this a Spotify problem?

Same problem here with several artists. Usually it changes about a week after release, so the first week the player isn't there (it's just the cover picture) and then, after about a week, the player starts showing. But, obviously, that's not how it should be - you wanna be able to share it from day one, and it's a big loss for Spotify IMO cos artists can't share their platform as intended.

The thing to remember is that it only previews a short clip almost at random from anywhere within the length of the track. This could be the chorus or the "hook" if you are lucky, it could also be from the long drawn out solo in the middle, that may not be the best place to give a true flavour of the song.

I tried the Facebook debugging technique that you have described, but unfortunately that doesn't work for me - I'm still left with only the artwork/link and not the Spotify player :(. Are there any other solutions out there? Many thanks, James

Storyline lets you add files and web links to your course player as supplemental information for learners. And when you attach a file to your player, you can also link to that same file from any slide in your course. Here's how:

When using this parameter, the play/pause button will be hidden. To start playback for your viewers, you'll need to either enable autoplay, use keyboard controls, or implement our player SDK to start and control playback.

If you enter a language preference that hasn't yet been uploaded for your particular video, the text track parameter will be ignored, and your embedded video may load with CC or subtitles disabled by default.

When disabled, the iframe background will become black. Black bars will be applied to the player when the height and width dimensions for the embedded player do not match the original aspect ratio of a video-- e.g the iframe dimensions are set to 4:3 square, but the original video is 16:9 wide.

Some examples of applications that only support Vimeo URLs are social media posts, WordPress themes and plugins, Wix plugins, Squarespace plugins, and other miscellaneous video embed tools within webpage builders. The good news is, some tools may allow you to adjust player preferences (like autoplay, for instance) directly in their own UI.

No amplifier is required. The Port (and the Connect before it) accepts a line-level signal, which is what a CD player puts out. The same is true for any other Sonos device which offers a Line-In, such as Amp and Five.

Any CD / DVD player with RCA Audio Out jacks as I pictured above should work fine if you use the RCA Audio out jacks. If you try to use the Video Out RCA jacks or other connections it may or may not work.

@jsp290 I'm using a Connect, the predecessor to the Port, with a Marantz CD 5400 ( -sources/cd-players/marantz/cd5400.html) myself. This is a very common and, despite your experience, simple way to use the Port 9or in my case a Connect). You connect the CD-player's RCA line out (shown in the message above by @Stanley_4 ) to the RCA line in on the Port, and group the Port in the Sonos app with the Sonos speakers you want. You can even set a preferred speaker the Port can play to in the settings for the Port in the Sonos app. I can confirm this works perfectly: I turn on the Marantz, put in a CD, start ist up and the sound comes from my Sonos Beam (my preferred speaker for the Connect)..

My CD-player, like all CD-players from wellknown manufacturers, has a line level output to the Port. Only turntables do not as standard give a line level output so can need a preamp to get a line level output to the Port.

This IS a common thing - with reservations I will go into later - and if you have play 5 speakers you do not even need a Port. Any bog standard CD player if it can be found seeing that they are obsolete now, will have an output jack/s that have to be wired to the line in jack on one of the speakers, using the stereo wire with the right jacks at both ends.

The reservation: CD players are obsolete because of how CD content is these days is kept on a hard disc that can be wired to a router and this content can then be wirelessly played via just Sonos speakers. A more common use now for the line in jack on the 5 speaker is for wiring a turntable to it.

I assume that in the first sentence, you had connected the portable CD player to the Port and managed to hear music for 30 seconds from the play 5 speakers? If it stopped only thereafter there are some other troubleshooting steps to take, and not to just abandon this CD player.

And once you get this set up to work well, if you wish the CD player can also be connected directly to one of the play 5 speakers bypassing the port. The jack on the connecting wire will be different because unlike the Port that has two input jacks, the play 5 has just one stereo jack that takes signals from both stereo channels. You may actually also solve the 30 second problem this way if it arises at the Sonos end and not the CD player end. So I would actually try this route first to troubleshoot the 30 second issue. You will just need to change out the connecting cable to do so.

It is quite possible some my CDs are missing too, but I have not discovered that till now! There are many in that lot that I haven't troubled myself yet to look for on Spotify. Or thought of, to stream.

Quite right, though albums from these artistes do feature, and more of them on Apple Music. Presumably you can also buy this one as a digital download and then use that for Sonos play via NAS or iBroadcast, so even for this a CD isn't really a must.

When I started using streaming services a couple of years ago, the library size was 30 million songs. Apple Music now has 90 million songs and I suspect so would Spotify. So over time, the population of missing CDs is dropping significantly. 152ee80cbc

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