Endgadget.com’s Darren Murph reports that the Korean consumer electronics company Human-Rh has come up with some winners in the “It’s About Time” category. Its new photo frames under the HDPF line not only represent an advance in panel quality but satisfy a much-needed extra: mobile TV.
The 7.6in HDPF-760D steals the show with its AMOLED display and a built-in DMB tuner; the 8in HDPF-800D sticks with the traditional LCD, but it’s available with a variety of tuners for 1-seg, T-DMB, DVB-T and CMMB. Both the company’s new frames still play back slideshows, but the built-in WiFi also lets them display information from Internet-connected widgets. They come with 2GB of integrated memory, a multicard slot and a USB port. An A/V output lets you send TV and video to a TV, and it can also be used for reading e-books.
This video isn’t in English, but the old adage “A picture is worth a thousand words” is true.
Posted on Jun 11, 2009 by Jane Goodwin at 12:05 am
There’s a new Eye-Fi card, and it looks pretty good to me! I’ve long been a fan of the Eye-Fi card, as our blog readers well know, and if the new Pro is as cool as its predecessors, I want one! My Eye-Fi card sends all of my pictures right straight back to my computer, and my trusty FrameChannel then starts including them in the slideshow on my wireless digital picture frame almost immediately.
We’re all pretty spoiled in these digital days; not that long ago taking a look at a vacation’s worth of photos required a trip to the store, a couple of hours (or days) wait, and then the better part of an afternoon getting fingerprints all over a stack of poorly composed shots that you daren’t throw out because you just paid good money to have them printed. Now you pop a memory card into your computer, wait a few seconds for them to fly into an appropriately labeled folder, and then… probably forget you took them. It’s so much easier it’s hard to fathom the process getting even more simple, but that’s what Eye-Fi has done with its line of wireless flash memory cards, which beam pictures directly from your camera. The company has just announced the $149, 4GB Eye-Fi Pro to make the process even more direct, letting you send pictures straight to a computer while also adding some additional features that pros and semi-pros will appreciate. We put it through its paces after the break.
The Pro inherits all the same abilities of its predecessors, like the Eye-Fi Explore Video, meaning it’ll suck JPEG pictures and videos directly from your video camera, geotagging them along the way, pumping them through any open hotspot it can connect to (or secured one you know the password to) before routing the potentially embarrassing mess to the computer of your choice. If that computer is on they’ll appear almost instantaneously; otherwise they’ll get buffered somewhere in the cloud and delivered the next time that computer goes online.
New with the Pro is the ability to also beam RAW files straight from the camera, something that will make pros or would-be’s a little happier when using this — but with only 4GB on tap we’re definitely thinking this is a product that’ll lean more toward the serious casual users than hardcore pros. You know, wedding shooters and the like.
The other new feature here is far more usable: the ability to connect directly to a PC and send images straight to it. This means you can set up your Wi-Fi enabled Mac or PC to act as a wireless access point, configure the Eye-Fi to use it, and then watch as fresh pictures appear on your desktop — cable free. That sounds fantastic and, once you get it working it is, but getting there is a bit of a challenge.
To configure the Eye-Fi card it has to be inserted into a computer, and then an online configuration tool appears. That’s the main problem here. Unless you have a machine that has both a wired and a wireless connection or is running something like Windows 7’s Virtual WiFi, as soon as you throw it into ad-hoc mode it’s going to lose its internet connection. Once it’s offline there’s no way to configure the card and, on top of that, some features like geotagging get disabled too.
It would have been nice if the included reader also doubled as a secondary wireless network card, which would have enabled a computer be online wirelessly while also downloading pictures directly. That might have increased costs slightly, but given the $150 price of admission here, that doesn’t seem like asking too much. Regardless, since it doesn’t, ideally you’ll be connecting to a machine that has both Ethernet and ether-based connections to the ‘net. If that’s the case, setup is fairly easy: create the ad-hoc network on your machine, tell the card to use it, and you should be ready to start beaming pictures.
We found that our computer took an unusually long time to lock on to the wireless card, nearly two minutes, but once connected it stayed connected — unless we allowed our camera to put itself into power saving mode. When that happened the card naturally powered down, our laptop disconnected, and then it was another few minutes to reconnect. We’re told it may be XP that’s to blame here, as connections on Vista or OSX are said to be much more expedient.
Any delays in re-connecting certainly didn’t mean that we needed to stop shooting, though, as once the laptop finished shaking hands any new pictures were quickly slung over, the software being smart enough to even pause and resume file transfers across connections for maximum efficiency.
Overall performance is quite good; pictures were delivered in seconds, and even videos went through quickly. We didn’t notice any lag on the camera side compared to a standard memory card. However, we were disappointed to find that the high-resolution .MTS video files created by our Panasonic DMC-ZS3 were not recognized by the card, and so had to be physically transferred by popping the card into a card reader. How terribly pedestrian!
It’s hard not to like the functionality of the Eye-Fi Pro. Before this, having pictures sent directly to a PC was something only on offer by higher-end DSLRs. Now any cheap compact with an SD slot can do it. Support for wirelessly transmitting RAW files is fantastic, and something users have apparently been clamoring for, but that 4GB of storage won’t last long shooting uncompressed — at least it won’t if you’re as trigger-happy as we are.
Those are the only two features not offered by the earlier Explore Video card, which retails for $50 less and, if you don’t mind losing the geotagging and access at random hotspots world-wide, you can save another $20 by going for the $79.99 Share Video. That’s still the safest bet for most users, but those prepared to pay a lot more for a few extra features (and every self-respecting photog should be) will find the Eye-Fi Pro a handy addition to their camera bag.
Endgadget.com has selected D-Link’s Wireless Internet Photo Frame, the DSM-210, as the winner of its annual “SWITCHIE” award, in the category of “Getting the Picture Across.”
Endgadget experts have said, about the DSM-210, that “Most digital photo frames continue to be islands, but not the D-Link Internet Photo Frame.”
This is the fourth annual SWITCHIE awards. (Saluting Wares Improving Technology’s Contribution to Humanity” And the D-Link DSM-210 Wireless Picture Frame was the only winnter in its category.
D-Link has partnered with FrameChannel; therefore, it is very easy for frame owners to access their pictures on Flickr, Picasa, Facebook, or wherever they might be storing their pictures online. With FrameChannel, it is als very simple to get RSS feeds on a regular basis.
Wireless picture frames give their owners tons of options, and D-Link is one of the very best. The D-Link wireless frame can be managed from a distance as well, giving grandmothers and great-uncles the opportunity to keep updated while doing NOTHING, themselves, except watch their frames change as their families grow, before their very eyes.
The DSM-210 has a 10-inch 16:9 screen, slots for almost any memory card, a USB cord, interchangeable black or white frames, and can be networked with either an Ethernet connection or WiFi network.
The new D-Link DSM-210 wireless digital picture frame can be purchased via the D-Link network of retail outlets, or online at the D-Link store. There, the MSRP is $249.99. I found this frame on Amazon, also, but at a higher price. If you’ve got a coupon, etc, it might be a better deal, but if not, you might want to buy it directly.
D-Link is one of my favorite makers of wireless/digital picture frames; if you count up the number of times I’ve posted about them, you would agree.
The new version of Likno Software’s “Frame Show” has been released!
For some people, having their digital photos displayed on a wireless digital picture frame just isn’t enough; some people want each photo have a distinctive ‘look’ to it. For these people, Likno Software created their ‘Frame Show.’
With FrameShow, you can make each, or just
The Digital Spectrum MF8104 is especially dear to my heart, because this is the wireless frame that’s sitting on the back of my piano, in my living room.
This is the 8-inch LCD screen that shows me a bright, clear slideshow of memories and events 24 hours a day. (I never turn it off.) It plays
Who needs to send postcards when you’ve got a wireless digital picture frame in your living room? Click HERE to see how people can keep in touch even when one of them is on the other side of the planet. It’s fantastic. It’s incredible. It’s like magic.
Be sure you watch the video, too.
Have I mentioned
Kodak has a new digital picture frame, and it doesn’t even need a power cord all of the time!
Kodak’s new EasyShare S730 has a rechargeable battery, and that makes it really nice: when you’ve got company, unplug the digital frame and it will look like GREAT ART on your wall!
The new Kodak EasyShare S730 does
Digital Spectrum’s classy little MF-575 picture frame. . . I want one. I want one on my desk, and I want it now. I like the looks of this frame, and I like everything I’ve heard about it.
The size – 5.6-inches – is perfect for your office desktop. Or, if you’d rather,
Phillips has a great digital frame that’s pretty unique. The frame, with a 7″ screen, will display your digital photos alongside an on-screen clock, calendar, and alarm clock. Not only that, the frame comes complete with a built in FM radio. Now you can wake up to your favorite song and your
According to Rachel King at ZDNet, Fujifilm’s soon-to-be-released 3D camera means that a 3D digital picture frame is not far behind!
Fujifilm is taking digital photography to the next level with the promise of a 3D digital camera model. The FinePix Real 3D System, set to ship in September, will come equipped with two lenses,
The MAGPIX Pocket Photo Album is ready to go with you everywhere, any time. It’s tiny and lightweight; ultra-portable, super bright, compact, and only 2.2 ounces. It’s oh-so-easy to use, too.
Never leave a memory behind; this tiny digital photo album, so small it fits in the palm of your hand, will also fit