
10-inch high quality LCD with 16:9 aspect ratio; KODAK Color Science give your pictures crisp details and vibrant colors
Play your videos or listen to your favorite MP3s with the frames built-in speakers
Kodaks Quick Touch Border makes it easy to control your digital frames; 2 decorative mattes included
Store up to 300 of your favorite pictures directly on your frames 128 MB of internal memory
2 SD card slots are available to allow you to have extra memory to view more pictures
Product Details
Product Dimensions:
13.5 x 9.8 x 3.5 inches ; 3.8 pounds
Shipping Weight: 4 pounds
Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
ASIN: B001FMXWA2
California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 warning.
Item model number: M1020
Average Customer Review:
This review is from: Kodak Easyshare M1020 Digital Picture Frame with Home Decor KitWhen I first purchased the Kodak Easy Share M1020 Digital Picture Frame, I loved it. Bright, sharp picture, easy to use interface.Since then I've come to like it less and less. The reasons?The frame offers a feature called Shuffle, supposedly selecting pictures and displaying them in random order. I have over 2,000 photos on my SSD card and I noticed that I was seeing the same photos over and over and other photos I was never seeing. I did some tests and discovered that the Kodak always selects the same photos in the same random order every time it is run. Turn it on tomorrow and you'll see the the same three photos chosen first, second and third, and so on. Nothing random about it.Secondly, the frame offers random transitions. One would think that this means that between each photo, the transitions are selected randomly, maybe a fade, followed by a wipe, and so on. Instead, all the transitions are the same; only when you turn it off and turn it back on again does it select a different transition, which it then uses for the entire slide show. (I've oversimplified this;if it chooses wipes as a transition, between pictures the Kodak will show various types of wipes, but it also does this when it is not in random mode).Okay so what's the big deal. Well, figuring it was Kodak, I thought I'd send a polite email telling them of these problems and asking them to fix them on the new firmware release.I got back a stock reply telling me to download the latest firmware. I already had the latest firmware but apparently they really don't read the emails you send them.I sent them another polite email saying that I already had the latest firmware and that all I was asking was for them to forward these problems to their technical folks so they could fix them.I got another email asking me to send my digital photo frame in for "repair".What I had not told them is that my brother has the exact same model and these tests yielded the same results on his frame. So it is the software, not the frame itself that needs repairing.Anyway, at this point I gave up, realizing that although they make all the standard claims about "valuing their customers' input", they are like every other business that simply sends out automated replies without really reading the emails.If these problems are of no concern to you, buy this frame because it really does display the picture very nicely. But I'd like it a whole lot better if I could put it in shuffle mode and know I'm going to see all my photos except the same few over and over....
This review is from: Kodak Easyshare M1020 Digital Picture Frame with Home Decor KitI'm a gadget type of guy and I've had my eye on these digital photo albums for quite some time. The early models had small screens and looked more like an electronic device and not a real picture frame. I got some cash for Christmas, saw this Kodak M1020 frame and decided to go for it.It is very easy to use and the display is bright and sharp. The device offers several options for loading photos... USB cable to load built-in memory via computer, USB flash drive, and various common format flash memory cards. The menu interface is unusual and does take a little getting used to, but I'm glad it is not a touch screen. I'd rather use a quirky interface touching the outer frame when needed rather than have to remove finger prints from the screen every time I change the settings. A remote would have been a better option - but this model does not have one. I use the feature to turn the frame off and on at specified times (why display photos all night long). I managed to get the music feature to work - but doubt I'll use it. I paid $130 -- which is pretty hefty in my book. But it is a nice size, looks nice, and offers enough features to make it worth the price. I just hope it lasts.One issue I did have... I resized about 5000 photos to the native resolution of the device (800 x 480) and put them on a single SD card. The frame software had a real tough time dealing with that many photos. Displaying thumbnails would take forever and occationally, the frame would lock up for a while and reboot. I cut the number of photos in half and the reboot problem stopped. But still, some menu functions are still sluggish. Even a few thousand photos seems to be straining the application. And as other reviewers have said - the shuffle feature is not as random as it should be. The sequence repeats and not all the the photos make it into the slideshow.FYI: Kodak released a firmware update (12-2009) -- which I loaded tonight. I reinstalled my SD card with 5000+ photos and the frame seems to be performing much better. The "shuffle" seems to be showing photos I have not seen before, so perhaps that feature is fixed. Time will tell. Anyway - I'm glad to see that Kodak is still supporting and trying to improve the product. Hopefully they will continue to do so.One last thing... My family thought I was crazy for buying this with my Christmas cash. But they have changed their tune. The frame is within v...
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