Hello Floid,
Thanks for your advice. Actually, I don't expect the hotel employees to actually use and change the information that Holliwood will display. Rather, I'll do some pages that just will keep passing (like a slide-show). It will all be very static, and it might need a change about twice a year, if prices or schedules change as seasons go by. So, it all comes down to a pretty basic thing.
The reason why I wanted to take the Amiga so far away from the amplifier is because I want to work in comfort. The hotel's TV amplifier is in such a place that you would not want to stay there very long (I would need a ladder, and I should hang the Amiga on the wall, you see). There is no other appropriate space any closer to the amplifier than the front desk, that is, about 30 meters far away.
Well, of course, another solution would be to leave the Amiga near the amplifier, and then bring the keyboard and the mouse far away but... isn't that going to be even more complicated?
The networking solution is ok, but I've never worked with it on the Amiga (besides having setup the internet over FastEthernet & Mediator on my 4000D). I would need a TCP/IP stack, maybe some file sharing system or telnet to transfer files... when exactly I can get a TV amplifier at a local hardware store and get done with it. Even if I know how to transfer files, I don't fully understand how I will program Holliwood scripts remotely and then get them working once they're on the Amiga whose viedo goes to the hotel rooms. Wouldn't that take stopping Holliwood and re-starting it so that it will load the new script into RAM? How can I do that remotely?
I am still inclined for the traditional coax+amplification solution.