About this page
A teleprompter with nothing to install: the script goes in the box, the pace is set in words a minute, and the Prompt button turns the screen into a slow river of type—white on black, a faint line marking where to read. The space bar pauses, the arrows adjust pace and position, and a presentation remote’s page keys do the same, so the lectern stays hands-free. The line under the button tells you how long the script will take before you commit to it; the mirror switch flips the text for a beam-splitter rig. The script itself stays in this browser, saved as you type.
Questions
How fast should the prompter scroll?
Conversational delivery sits around 130–150 words a minute; lectures often want less, readings for the camera a little more. Set the number, read the estimate under the button—the page converts your script’s length into minutes—and adjust while reading with the up and down arrows; the speed shown in the corner follows.
Can I use it with a presentation remote?
Yes. Remotes present themselves as a keyboard sending Page Up and Page Down: here Page Down pauses and resumes, and Page Up steps back ten seconds—the two gestures a talk actually needs. The space bar and arrow keys do the rest when you are within reach.
What is the mirror for?
A studio teleprompter bounces the screen off angled glass in front of the lens, which flips the image; mirrored text flips it back. Tick Mirror—or press M while reading—when the prompter is read through a beam-splitter; leave it off when reading straight from the screen.
Where does my script go?
Nowhere. It stays in this browser, saved to local storage on your device as you type, and is waiting when you return. Clearing the browser’s site data clears the script too.
More instruments: a fullscreen clock with pomodoro, a blank page to write on and a name draw for classrooms—or see all of them.