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It's a network, which means everything can access everything else regardless of how or where they connect to the network.
To so stream video from one device to another all they need is a language in common - they need to support the same protcols and formats.
Looking at the manual for your Blu-ray player it looks like it's a year or two too early to do what you want.
ftp://ftp.panasonic.com/dvdrecorder/om/dmr-bs850_en_om.pdf
USB doesn't work like SCART or HDMI. USB is a client to host protocol, so you can think of it as a port for plugging in devices for the Blu-ray player to control, rather than an input for data.
It's likely that the only type of devices the blu-ray supports are USB storage, so if it can't read the files in the format you want then your only option there would be to convert
So you're looking at a new device to connect to the TV capable of streaming stuff across the network. That's virtually everything on sale today, the Amazon Firestick with the playback software called Kodi installed was just one example.
At JayCee says your big limiting factor is going to be finding something you can actually connect if you don't have HDMI. There are SCART to HDMI converters, but with no HDMI inputs your TV is presumably SD so you'd have to be a bit careful whatever device you bought supported SD TVs.
A Network share is a folder on your hard drive shared to that it's accessible to other devices on the network. It's a standard option in Windows, Mac OS and most other operating systems (although if your PC is a Chromebox you might have issues).
That's one way of doing it, another equally common way is to run a DLNA server on your PC instead, which gives you some extra functionality and is at least as widely supported by receiving devices. Plex is one of the most popular, but there are plenty of others (The PC version of Kodi can likely do it too).
You'd need something newer than 2009 connected to your TV first though. |
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