I want to watch movies on my IPad Air 2 on an airline trip but I don't have much memory. I was going to download movies to a compatible flash drive. What would I need to do to watch the movies. Also what equipment would I need to buy? PNY or SanDisk 64 GB flash drive better?

So, whatnever movies you have on those flash drives, you would have to transfer the movie you wish to watch back to the iPad, where it will get transferred to the iOS Videos app where you can play and watch your movie.


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I got the 64 GB SanDisk Wireless Flash Drive. Now after downloading a movie to my IPad how do I move to the flash drive? Also they are commercial movies, so then how do I move them from the Flash Drive back to the IPad Air 2 to watch? I'm pretty new to Apple. This is my first one.

If the content you download to your iPad stays in its particular video app (and not downloaded to the iOS Video app for iTunes video purchases) then I am not sure how you would transfer this video app specific content to the flash drive.

I also have movies in Apple ITunes too but I could not figure out how to transfer them to the Ipad after downloading to the wireless drive? Then how do you transfer them back to the IPad from the drive?

My question is, is the flash drive a reliably safe spot to store my movie collection? I won't be plugging/unplugging/moving it much, but I'm just curious as to if there's a higher chance of it corrupting vs. an external HDD, something like that. And if so, is the degree of difference in safety big enough that I shouldn't even mess with a flash drive?

So indeed reading from a flash memory will cause it to rewrite some blocks every now and then. Writing to a flash memory happens block wise, and every block can only be rewritten a certain amount of times (actual number differs). But considering that this number is quite high, the drive manages (wear leveling) the writes to be evenly spread across the drive, and only every 100th or so read uses a write, your drive will probably die of other reasons before. Or you will just dump it, because it has gotten too small.

No. Reads by themselves do not wear out a flash drive; the limit applies only to write operations. However, repeated read operations may necessitate occasional rewriting as noted by Walter Maier-Murdnelch.

As a side note, the number of write cycles a flash memory block can sustain ranges from less than 5,000 to 1,000,000, depending on the process--flash ICs manufactured using processes with smaller nanometer values wear out faster (25nm flash memory is limited to about 3,000 write cycles). To mitigate this limitation, flash drives use wear leveling to spread writes across the flash memory IC to ensure that no one block receives a disproportionate number of writes.

Otherwise, flash drives have a long enough lifespan for all practical purposes, and it is more probable that actual physical harm will come to them, than that they will die from "material wear" in that time.

Now that streaming services like Netflix and Hulu are so popular, it's hard to find movies available for download. Although some services let you save movies for offline viewing, you can't actually store their files on your USB drive. This wikiHow teaches you how to download movies (legally) from the internet and save them to your removable flash drive.

I had a Western Digital HD TV payer and an attached USB drive with all my movies etc - which worked smoothly, fast and reliable with pretty much any file format. I wanted some additional functionality and got ATV with aTV Flash for it. The installation worked fine, but I get the same kind of freezing problems some reported. Further, and much more irritating:

-Apple TV is much, much slower in responding to commands with the remote, especially when navigating file folders and

-when playing movies, even just DVIX (not even 264H or HD material) the movie does not play smoothly and hangs every other second. Small things like clips in the region of

Thank you! So to avoid going through lenghly hacking procedures, I can just fill the USB Hard Drive with the media content I want and attach it to ATV; while I define the Itunes-Storage place to be internal, right? That would mean that I can watch iTunes stuff through the ATV box from the internal drive and movies I buy are stored there, but through NitroTV I can access the USB drive with sufficient speed given the cable is actually ok?

Just checking. Because if the USB connection proofs to work with a new cable (which I am going to buy now) that would clearly be my preferred choice.

/Nils

I always download movies from torrents and have them on my laptop. Now I was trying to transfer them to my USB so it won't take too much space. Once I connected my USB to my TV the movies are not there? What am I doing wrong? So far the only thing I've done is just drag the movie to the USB.

Is there anyway I can add the movies to the library and get the iMDB data directly onto the USB flash memory from my computer, so it is all there when I put back in the car? So not having to do those operations on the Venz unit in the car. For several reasons it is a real hazzle doing it in the car.

Hi everyone. I downloaded a movie to my PC, where I started to play it in order to check that it was ok, which it was.

I then copied it from PC to 32 GB USB flash drive/ memory stick. Again,It worked when I started to play it on the PC. I then plugged the flash drive into the USB port on my Sony Bravia KDL32EX503 TV.

A message appeared on the screen to say that the flash drive had been inserted, but nothing happened after that.

What am I doing wrong?

Thanks in advance for any help.

After I installed it and set it up to share the flash drive contents, which is straightforward, I was able to watch the movie on the TV.I also set it up to share the 'downloads; folder on my PC. Next time I download a film to the PC, I should be able to share it with the TV without having to copy it to the flash drive.

I have strange case.. All these days, my Sony Bravia was playing all movies from external hard disk and pen drives. But, from last two days it stopped recognizing the movie files. I am not sure what has happened to my TV. Can some one help me in solving this?

I have a PC. I bought a movie that came with a digital copy. I put the digital copy into iTunes. I dragged the copy from my PC to the SanDisk wireless flash drive. I connected my iPad to the flash drive. I found the movie on the flash drive. I touched it to play it. The flash drive gives me the following message:

New TP-Link user here, I just got the TP-Link Archer C5400X. Previously I had a Netgear Nighthawk X10 and it had something called the Plex Media Server which allows me to install an app on my phone or tabler and then I'd be able to stream movies and see info about the movie and whatnot.

Now I did enable USB Sharing in my router which then gave me like an FTP Address. When entering the FTP Address in my phone or tablet in a browser, it shows me the movies just fine but the thing is, when I click on a movie, it doesn't stream it but rather download the entire movie to the phone's internal storage. I want to be able to just watch (stream) the movies without having to download them.

download any file manager that has an ftp program in it. Fill in the details ie ftp address , password and username which the router usb page gives you. This is convenient to allow someone anywhere in the world to access your hard drive. Do not give them admin rights for security.

I then ran total commander from the apps list (Unknow Apps) and was able to see an icon for USB drive. However I was using a 64gb drive and it would not open. Am going to try a 16gb fat32 micro SD card tonight with a micro SD to USBC connector. We will see if that works.

You may need help from MovPilot Amazon Prime Video Downloader. After you purchase a Prime movie:

1. Download the purchased Amazon Prime movie to computer via MovPilot.

2. Copy Amazon Prime movie to USB drive." }}, {"@type": "Question","name": "Can I transfer downloaded movies from Amazon Prime APP?","acceptedAnswer": {"@type": "Answer","text":"No, transferring downloaded movies from the Amazon Prime Video app to other devices or storage mediums is not supported. The downloaded movies are encrypted and can only be accessed and played through the Amazon Prime Video app. They are not intended for transferring or sharing outside of the app.

But you can use MovPilot Amazon Prime Video Downloader to convert Prime movies to plain MP4 files and then transfer Amazon Prime movies to USB flash drive."}}]}]////   Products  Netflix Video Downloader  Amazon Prime Video Downloader  Disney+ Video Downloader  Max(HBO) Video Downloader  Hulu Video Downloader    Store  Downloads  Support    Amazon Prime Video Downloader Free Download  Free Download  How to Download Amazon Prime Movies to USB Flash Drive  Phoebe Clinton  December 4, 2023 Quick Navigation  Tool Requirement: MovPilot Amazon Prime Video Downloader

Amazon Prime provides a download feature for subscribers to watch Prime movies offline. However, the downloads are encrypted. You can not customize the download location of Amazon videos and transfer the downloads to your USB flash drive, but watch them within the Prime video app. 17dc91bb1f

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