31
simple as highlighng the input’s le in the screen, and pressing OK. The video signal on the input, if any, appears
on the screen.
: You also can use the buons on the TV panel to select a TV input, as explained in “Panel buons” on page
25. “Customizing your TV” on page 44 explains how to rename and remove inputs.
Auto-detecting devices
Your TV automacally detects when you connect a new device to an HDMI input and turn on its power. The input is auto-
macally added to the screen if it isn’t already present.
Adjusting audio/video settings
While watching video content on any input, press to display the menu. Press the UP and DOWN arrows to
highlight an opon, and then press the LEFT and RIGHT arrows to change the seng. “Adjusng TV sengs” on page
35 explains each of the sengs in detail.
Playing content from USB storage devices
Your TV has a USB port that can be used to play personal music, video, and photo les from a personal USB ash drive or
hard disk. If your TV is connected to the Internet, your screen has the le. If your TV has not
been connected to the Internet, the screen has the le.
To use this feature, rst make sure your media les are compable with the Roku/USB Media Player. As of the publicaon
date of this guide, the following media le formats are supported
*
:
• – (H.264/262/265HEVC) in MKV, MP4, and MOV les; VP9 in MKV les
• – AAC (5.1), MP3, WMA, WAV (PCM), AIFF, FLAC, AC3, and DTS
†
• – JPG, PNG (up to 4k x 4k pixels), GIF (up to 4k x 4k pixels)
To see the latest list of supported formats
*
, view in the Media Player.
The Roku/USB Media Player displays supported le types
*
only, and hides le types it knows it cannot play.
* There are many variants of each of these media formats. Some variants may not play at all or may have issues or inconsistencies
during playback.
† DTS audio, whether in music or video les, is supported only by pass-through, meaning that the TV cannot directly output the
sound of a DTS le, but can pass it through to a DTS-compable receiver that is connected to the HDMI ARC or S/PDIF connector on
the TV.