Two quick comments on Jon's reply:

1. One of the advantages of the standalone media players such as the WD or the 
Seagate FreeAgent Theater is that they will read hard drives in all the major 
formats: NTFS (current PC), FAT (old PC), or HFS+ (Mac). Thus there need be no 
issues with the FAT 4GB file limit.

2. Jon is indeed correct that the highest possible quality would come from a 
computer (which could be a laptop) equipped with additional hardware that can 
allow it to generate 'real video' HDMI/DVI or component out from 
less-compressed formats such as AppleProRes422. The major players in this sort 
of video hardware are AJA, Blackmagic Designs, and Matrox. The Blackmagic 
Intensity Shuttle and the Matrox MX02 Mini are small, easily transportable and 
relatively inexpensive ($200 - $500) interfaces that can work with laptops, and 
would be worth considering for makers who travel with their, would be bringing 
their laptops anyway, and can manage the modest extra expense.

For a stationary installation, (e.g. exhibitors) a Mac Pro or a Quad Core 
Windows machine equipped with a standard PCIe Blackmagic Intensity card ($200) 
would yield HD-video out about 'as good as it gets'. However, with any 
computer, you get into limits dictated by the OS and the software: PCs won't 
read Mac drives; Macs won't write to NTFS; Mac software tends not to like .MKV 
containers, etc. Which means potentially more work on an exhibitor's end 
converting submitted files into something that works well with the system. But 
there's no perfect solution, and this would certainly be far superior to trying 
to juggle a series of tape and disc physical formats, all requiring different 
sorts of players.

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