User guide
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various strategies. These strategies include 
wear leveling
 when writing, automatic error 
correction when reading, re-writing a block that is becoming susceptible to read errors, and 
moving blocks around in the NAND chip that are repeatedly read over and over. 
A typical BrightSign application includes an 
attract 
video loop. If this video is fairly short, then a 
small number of flash blocks are read repeatedly. Over a month or so, the number of times the 
attract loop plays can be enough to trigger fatigue read errors if the CF card’s controller chip is 
not designed to handle and eliminate these type of errors. Industrial rated CF/SD cards are 
designed with high levels of repeated use in mind. Whereas consumer CF/SD cards may be 
designed with lower cost or quality standards that assume a digital camera is the typical usage 
scenario.
Speed
All modern CF cards we have tried have sufficient read speed for digital sign and kiosk 
applications with standard definition video. In general you need a card that can sustain read rates 
of over 3 megabytes per second for standard video. However for standard video, we recommend 
CF/SD cards with read rates of 4 megabytes per second, which are easy to find. For Hi-Def video, 
we recommend a card that can sustain read rates of over 6 megabytes per second. You can test 
a card’s speed with BrightSign by placing a file on it, and using the BrightSign Shell 
readperf
command. 
BrightSign compatibility
BrightSign is compatible with most CF/SD cards, but may not be 100% compatible with every 
model. Although there are standards for CF/SD card interfaces, most chips are slightly different. 
We have tested with a large number of chips, and at this point have high compatibility.
When deploying a group of BrightSigns into the field, BrightSign strongly recommends that you 
test the CF/SD card with the BrightSign software version you are using before deployment, and 
insist that your CF/SD card duplicator uses the same CF/SD brand and model number as the 
model number you tested.










