Wireless Media Stick™ Stream photos, music and videos to any USB enabled media player wirelessly
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Enjoy Music, Photos and Videos on your big screen TV, Entertainment System, Stereo, through your PS3, XBOX360, DVD, Blu-ray and any other media player.
Read like a USB flash drive, allows any device with a USB port to playback files stored on PC/Mac/or external Hard Drive. Wirelessly share stored files from any computer in your home network to any TV, Blu-ray player, DVD player, stereo, digital photo frame or Playstation 3 and XBOX 360 equipped with a USB port. Your device reads the Wireless Media Stick™ like a flash drive however the files read are back in your computer(s).
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Extend the life of any device and turn it into a network device. Network your old and new devices by plugging the Wireless Media Stick™ in the devices USB port and play files that live in your PC/Mac
The Wireless Media Stick™ sees shared media files from your networked computers and presents them to the media player’s USB port as if the files were stored locally. Once you select a file for playback on your media player, the Wireless Media Stick™ then streams that file via your wireless router from any PC, Mac, laptop, Macbook, NAS device or Android Smartphone/Tablet. Files are not copied or moved from the original location. Plug the Wireless Media Stick™ into the USB port of your media player and stream your media files instantly.
Mac, Windows, Linux and Android compatibility




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Share a file
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Stream a file
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Play a file
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WIRELESSLY
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It’s not a memory stick! It’s a media stick
At a glance people think the Wireless Media Stick™ is a USB memory stick, but it’s not. It has brains!
Basically, the Wireless Media Stick™ is a network bridge between your computer and your media player (TV, DVD, Blu-ray™, game console, stereo, digital picture frame, WDTV™, O!play™ and many others) that is capable of reading files from the player’s USB port.
1TB virtual memory!
The advantage of the Wireless Media Stick™ is that it doesn’t store files, it enables you to stream music, video and photo files that are stored on your computers. The Wireless Media Stick™ accesses shared folders from any computer connected to your wireless router and presents them to the USB port it connects to. The memory is on your network, not on the Wireless Media Stick™. Playback is handled by your media player(s) – TV, DVD/Blu-Ray™ player, stereo, photo frame, game console.
What you share is what you get
When you configure your Wireless Media Stick™ to stream your shared media files, the files stored in your computer’s shared folders are what your media player will ‘see’. For example, if you have an .AVI file stored in a shared folder the media player will see that file (if it is capable of playing that file format).
Go completely wireless with Google™ Android™ Smartphones and Tablets
With an Android™ Smartphone or Tablet filled with your favorite media, any media player can become an entertainment playground. Share videos to your TV or DVD/Blu-ray players, music to your home stereos, or even pictures. No home-network is required, when using the Wireless Media Stick™ Android™ App from HSTi in combination with your Wireless Media Stick™, anytime, anywhere.
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See what the leading press is saying about the Wireless Media Stick™:
- Best of Consumer Electronic Show 2011 – “All of us here just love little gadgety things, and we agree that the HSTi Wireless Media Stick is a winner… 2011 has arrived and serves your media in style.” – Android Central
- “The Wireless Media Stick is an interesting little product that aims to bring media streaming to pretty much anything with a USB port – engadget
- “HSTi demoed the Media Stick, at CES 2011, by streaming an HD movie from a Galaxy S tablet to a TV with a built in USB port and media player. Both devices were connected to an 802.11g (b and n are also supported) wireless network. Picture quality was perfect with no hiccups nor glitches.” – Best Buy magazine
- “The Wireless Media Stick will give your TV-connected media player access to files wherever you store them on your network.” - PC Magazine

