|
I thought this would be a good deal for the money, but now I'm just going to go out and spend the money on the Sony version. I tried to plug it directly into my camera and it still came up with no preview and a black screen. I even called Coby tech support to find out if I was doing something wrong and she told me to return it. I bought this from Long's. I hope it works. I tried a photo card and it said it couldn't read it. It powered up fine and showed the demo slideshow, but nomatter what I did, my photos showed up as a black screen. I tried a flash drive, and there was no jpeg preview and the photo was black.
Not sure why that's the case.The buttons are a bit small. I wish there was something as simple as the iphone picture viewer at a reasonable price. Resolution is not great, but you can certainly see the pictures. We actually bought this as a gift for my grandfather, and he has a difficult time flipping through the pictures. That is what we were looking for. We tried using full resolution pictures (multi-megapixel) and slimmed down pictures, but they looked the same. The pictures from our SLR looked much better (less pixelated) than the point-shoot camera.
I order 2 frames one of them was broken I am very disappointed of Amazon.
The software I used is "JS PhotoPrep". Once you get into the slide show mode, click the right arrow twice to get into the full screen mode. But, the fact that the pictures do not fit your screen well irritated me initially until I found out a solution.
Select Crop ratio as 4X6 and "Desk-view" in Perform Resize with a High quality (for enlarging). You should be able to see your pics coming on the full screen without distorting it. Now use these pics on your Coby Photo frame.
Well, the product is good for its price. Once you download and install, check mark both "Perform Crop" and "Perform Resize". Hope this helps.
You need a software to convert your 4:3 pictures to 16:9. You can convert all your pics at once.
The display is also quite contrasty and a little dark. This could be frustrating for folks not used to using graphics programs of any type, though, and is tedious to do for many photos like I have been. I like that it takes many kinds of memory cards as I may switch to a CF card so that it doesn't stick out the side of the frame. I haven't been able to figure out how to move from one slide to next manually using remote in full-screen mode.Again, overall, great basic introduction to the photo frame concept, and probably quite good for those whose expectations aren't high. I found N. I had thought about digital photo frames for some time, then received one as a gift, so I had no preconceived notions about performance.
I like the 2-color frame feature though I haven't tried it yet. The resolution is adequate, though I was a bit surprised that the resolution was not higher, the display is somewhat pixelated, and a higher rez is definitely something I will look for in my next frame. Overall I think this was a good basic introduction to the photo frame concept. Michael's review and instructions extremely helpful and they work great. I am enjoying it quite a lot as my digital photos aren't trapped on my computer anymore. I do turn mine off when not viewing (as you should with any electronic gizmo) and have not yet seen any image moving sideways.Pros: I personally found it easy to set up, get it loaded with photos and start displaying, basically just loaded a USB drive, inserted it and turned on the frame.
Seems sturdy enough to use other places than the desktop, this might be a fun thing to actually take to an event somewhere (family reunion, charity event, trade show booth for example), loaded with photos of past events, and set it up to display.Cons: Photos need cropping to display properly and make maximum use of the pixels on the screen.
|