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BrowserShow is a browser-based URL carousel tool designed to turn any set of websites into a continuously looping full-screen display. Users simply paste URLs, set the dwell time for each page, drag to reorder, and click play. It can be used for dashboards, office displays, lobby screens, or TV-style status boards. Its key selling points are that it runs in any modern browser, requires no installation, and needs no infrastructure.
The core feature set centers on web page rotation: unlimited slides, per-page timing, drag-and-drop ordering, keyboard shortcuts, full-screen looping playback, and local autosave. The free plan can save one show locally; Plus supports multiple named shows and cloud sync across devices. Deployment is via a pure web-based cloud service, making it suitable for temporary or lightweight use cases. The available text does not mention any self-hosting option.
Pricing is straightforward: Free costs $0, requires no account or credit card, and has no limits on display time or number of slides. Plus costs $9/month and adds multi-show management, cloud sync, the Proxy API, and priority support. Subscriptions are billed monthly, can be canceled at any time, and refunds are handled on a case-by-case basis. For single-screen or small-screen-count users, the free plan offers excellent value.
BrowserShow does not disclose typical third-party integrations such as Slack or Google Workspace, but it can display web pages such as dashboards, analytics, news feeds, and internal tools. The Plus plan’s Proxy API is the main differentiator: it can route certain sites through a server-side proxy to work around blank-page issues caused by X-Frame-Options blocking embeds. However, the terms also make clear that users are responsible for complying with third-party website terms of service, and prohibit using the proxy for scraping or systematic copying. Security and compliance information is limited; the site only notes that data stays local when using the free version, and that Plus account users must protect their credentials.
The main advantages are that it is extremely quick to get started, requires no registration, has few restrictions on the free plan, and needs no installation. It is especially well suited for operations boards, BI dashboards, reception displays, and office status screens. The downsides are its relatively narrow feature scope and the lack of team permissions, device fleet management, auditing, content templates, and enterprise-grade compliance documentation. The service also does not promise uninterrupted availability. For more complex digital signage scenarios, alternatives such as Screenly, Yodeck, and Dakboard may be worth considering.
The crawled text does not provide information about access from mainland China, payment methods, or localization, so this remains unknown. If you plan to use it for large office displays in China, you should first test the stability of browsershow.com, the target websites being displayed, and the Plus proxy capability on the actual network, and confirm whether supported payment methods are available.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on browsershow.com official site.
browsershow.com is an Unknown Site Builders provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach browsershow.com directly.