Home > Consumer Reviews > Kodak Easyshare 10" Wi-Fi Digital Picture Frame
Kodak Easyshare 10" Wi-Fi Digital Picture Frame
See it at Amazon.co.uk for £229.99Average Customer Rating
Amazon Customer Reviews
Most Helpful First | Newest First | + Share1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
lightning delivery, simple and quick to set up - quite impressed!
I had this thing opened and set up on my wireless network to shared photo / video / music folders within fifteen minutes. All pretty straightforward I thought. The internal speakers are naturally pretty small and weedy, but it does have a headphone output (minijack) which I used to plug into some better speakers and was able to stream music files from my hard drive wirelessly too (at the same time as pulling images wirelessly) .. I'm reckon the streamed audio is a bit hissy but as I haven't played around with that part much yet it might just be I'd selected a batch of slightly hissy audio files (doubtful, but possible maybe?) to try it with. The overall finish is a bit 'cheapy plastic' to the touch (which is mostly where it loses the fifth star from me).. but it LOOKS quite acceptable (and you aren't going to be touching it much). There is a row of small control buttons on the top, not visible from the front .. but you'll probably not use them much as the remote is very useable - there is a little clip in the packaging which fits to the rear of the unit that the remote can slip into (so you don't lose it .. as it is pretty dinky). It's worth reading the instructions to make sure you 'get' the remote functions. I didn't at first (believing, as I do, that if it needs an instruction book at all, a gizmo is not user-friendly enough) but a quick check of the rather impressively thick book (lots of different languages) put me right.
Overall, the resolution and display is fine for the purpose, sufficiently bright and colourful without over doing it. I notice there are some tweakable controls (brightness and the like) hiding down in the menus if you feel the need .. so far I've left pretty much alone. You can even zoom in on the image a couple of steps and pan around .. if you should want to.
It does seem to have problems with a handful of my image files .. which it refuses to display. Not sure quite yet what the problem is .. might be they are too large (having been fiddled with in Photoshop maybe?) but it seems happy with most stuff.
Setting a folder in Windows Media is easy and the frame found the folder immediately. I might experiment with batch file resize of photos I want to display down to the 800x480 pixel count - as large file sizes do take a while to stream over to it. The built in transitions are ok, though it would have been nice to have a 'fade' option to create more 'subtle' transitions. It plays video clips quite adequately .. I dare say with a bit of experimenting it might even be able to stream full movies across from the hard drive (if one has the software available to be able to create such things) and the screen's probably just about big enough to cope with that as a 'spare' screen. I bought an 8Gb card to use .. as I did read the wireless stuff was a bit fragile .. but so far, I have found it to have a perfectly acceptable connection. So I might use the card for something else!
The Kodak Easy-Share software is ok, though I was surprised it didn't have a facility to connect that software to the frame (at least not anything I've found thus far). Instead you head for Windows Media Player (v11+) as the easiest method of getting your images over. As Kodak have Easy-Share software bundled in with the frame it seemed a bit of a missed opportunity from a usability point of view that the software couldn't see the frame as a 'connected device'. The frame can find your normal shared 'My Music', My Pictures' etc., folders in Windows and you can wander through the folders on your PC relatively easily from the frame itself just using the remote.
I would be less impressed at the original RRP of £230 Amazon claim this was (particularly with the quality of plastic used), but for less than half that, with various media card slots built in (no memory stick though .. which is a bit of a shame as my digital camera is a Sony!), wireless, audio streaming and a half decent display I think it's good value for money .. If, after playing with this for a few days I am still impressed, I might even buy another one.
Overall, the resolution and display is fine for the purpose, sufficiently bright and colourful without over doing it. I notice there are some tweakable controls (brightness and the like) hiding down in the menus if you feel the need .. so far I've left pretty much alone. You can even zoom in on the image a couple of steps and pan around .. if you should want to.
It does seem to have problems with a handful of my image files .. which it refuses to display. Not sure quite yet what the problem is .. might be they are too large (having been fiddled with in Photoshop maybe?) but it seems happy with most stuff.
Setting a folder in Windows Media is easy and the frame found the folder immediately. I might experiment with batch file resize of photos I want to display down to the 800x480 pixel count - as large file sizes do take a while to stream over to it. The built in transitions are ok, though it would have been nice to have a 'fade' option to create more 'subtle' transitions. It plays video clips quite adequately .. I dare say with a bit of experimenting it might even be able to stream full movies across from the hard drive (if one has the software available to be able to create such things) and the screen's probably just about big enough to cope with that as a 'spare' screen. I bought an 8Gb card to use .. as I did read the wireless stuff was a bit fragile .. but so far, I have found it to have a perfectly acceptable connection. So I might use the card for something else!
The Kodak Easy-Share software is ok, though I was surprised it didn't have a facility to connect that software to the frame (at least not anything I've found thus far). Instead you head for Windows Media Player (v11+) as the easiest method of getting your images over. As Kodak have Easy-Share software bundled in with the frame it seemed a bit of a missed opportunity from a usability point of view that the software couldn't see the frame as a 'connected device'. The frame can find your normal shared 'My Music', My Pictures' etc., folders in Windows and you can wander through the folders on your PC relatively easily from the frame itself just using the remote.
I would be less impressed at the original RRP of £230 Amazon claim this was (particularly with the quality of plastic used), but for less than half that, with various media card slots built in (no memory stick though .. which is a bit of a shame as my digital camera is a Sony!), wireless, audio streaming and a half decent display I think it's good value for money .. If, after playing with this for a few days I am still impressed, I might even buy another one.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Poor Wi-Fi
The picture frame is easy to setup assuming you have an open'ish wi-fi network. I have a hidden, secure & access restricted network but I was still able to connect it. Now the catch - I have a Netgear router and had to position the frame about 20cm away to pick-up a strong enough signal!!
But as a stand-alone frame - picture quality & sound are superb. Next time I'll forget about the wi-fi and save some money.
But as a stand-alone frame - picture quality & sound are superb. Next time I'll forget about the wi-fi and save some money.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
BRILLIANT
Kodak Easyshare Picture frame is BRILLIANT.
Easy to set up and load.
Very good quality pictures.
Looks good to.
Easy to set up and load.
Very good quality pictures.
Looks good to.
Best product I have purchased with so much of ease
A wonderful product that I wanted to buy for my family friend. I hope I got for the best price with good features like WiFi, remote etc.