
10.4¿ TFT LCD Display 800X600 with 2 Wood Frames, Cherry and Black
Wi-Fi Connectivity, Web enabled. Receive emails, RSS feeds, news, sports, finance, more¿
256 MB memory, 4:3 aspect ratio, 4-in-1 card reader, USB XD Card Reader
Display photos. Play photo slideshows, movies & music
Built-in speakers, Dual USB, clock with date
Product Details
Product Dimensions:
11.8 x 2 x 10 inches ; 1 pounds
Shipping Weight: 7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
ASIN: B000H743WC
Item model number: U-40101
Average Customer Review:
This review is from: Digital Spectrum MemoryFRAME MF-8104 Premium 10.4-Inch Wireless Digital FrameI purchased this digital photo frame for my parents with the hope that they'd just hang it on their wall and then be see new photos each day that I'd uploaded to one of the free online photo sites (Flickr, Webshots, Windows Live Spaces) from wherever I was.This frame definitely did not live up to my expectations and I ended up returning it. Here is why:1. User Interface :: The user interface was difficult to use and often left me frustrated because it didn't act in ways that I expected it to. I wouldn't have thought that it'd be hard to design an interface that would work something like Windows Media Center where you can browse what media (pictures, videos, mp3s) you have on the frame's memory, online photo sites, or shared on the home computer, but apparently it is.2. Wireless Connectivity :: It was difficult to setup with the wireless router and I often was left keying in the passcode for the router time after time. Extremely annoying when you have to do this via remote and a directional keypad. Once the wireless connection was established, I could only get the frame to connect to my photos on Webshots and not on Flickr or Windows Live Spaces. I don't know the reason for this, just know that was the problem that I had.3. Video Playback :: It does play videos but only if they're resized to 320x240 despite the frame's resolution being much greater than this. 4. Photos on SD Card :: I expected to be able to take the SD card out of the back of my camera and put it into the card reader on the back of the frame and view the images on the card but here I ran into another problem. The frame would only recognize the photos on the card if they were not in any folder or subfolder on the SD card (most digital cameras place the image files into a folder or subfolder on the memory card and not straight onto the card's memory -- therefore making it impossible to just take the memory card straight from the camera and see the images on the frame). 5. Transitions :: All I really wanted was some kind of basic fade out/fade in or a crossfade would have been brilliant. Instead, the frame has cheesy wipes and slides that look terrible. The "no transition" choice was the only bearable on there -- and that says a lot.6. Cost :: I really was hoping that the old adage "you get what you pay for" would apply here as the frame cost around 370 to my door, but in this case I found there to be no reason to pay that much for this frame unless they work out all of the problems and bugs that I listed above.7. The Little Things :: Besides the more major problems that I listed above, there were a lot of lesser issues I had with the frame as well. For example, included in the box was a memory card reader that directly plugged into a USB port to accommodate different types of memory cards, but given the shape of this card reader, it couldn't even fit into the USB port on the back of the frame.Overall :: I don't feel that I was expecting too much from this frame given the $350 price tag and promising product description. I think that it was a mistake to buy this product in it's first generation (the user manual was even just a few photocopied pieces of paper folded in half). The overall impression I got is that the company rushed to get this frame out (as it was supposed to be released months ago) and in doing so there were corners cut and problems that remain unresolved....
This review is from: Digital Spectrum MemoryFRAME MF-8104 Premium 10.4-Inch Wireless Digital FrameI gave this picture frame two stars because, in the end, it has nice screen and it shows pictures. It's a nice technology.But, this company clearly doesn't know the difference between a technology and a product. A technology is a wireless picture frame. A product is a wireless picture frame with a helpful owners manual, a clean interface, high quality, and working company website. This frame had none of these.My first experience with the frame was taking it out of the box and reading the instructions. These were printed on a large sheet in a step by step fashion. The steps did not exactly match what I saw on the screen, but they were close.The instructions said that the frame should be controlled from the remote. But my remote was broken. So I couldn't use the frame.I went to the website and found out that the support links gave 404 errors . They were missing pages. The only contact information was for two PR guys.When I finally found an email address and let them know what I needed they sent me a new remote. Or tried to. First they accidentally sent me the stand that holds up the back of the frame. Then they sent me a new remote. When I started using the remote I found buttons that control the frame hidden on the back. The instructions hadn't mentioned them.I tried to get the frame working with Flikr. There were no instructions for this. There was no screen for entering a password. I read another review that said the frame only works with Webshots. I switched.Interestingly, when I switched to Webshots I found testing data in the dialog box for Webshots. Apparently that interface had been tested. Had the Flikr interface? No idea.The frame's features ...
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