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Philips 8FF3CDW Digital photo frame 8 800 x

by admin · 2 comments

in Digital Frames,Kids Camera

Brand: Philips
Average Rating
2 reviews

How many digital pictures are hidden on your PC? See, share, organize and relive your memories with Philips PhotoFrame, the easiest way to display your digital photos in stunning quality – without a PC.Your viewing experience is going to be awesome as Philips PhotoFrame comes with an additional SD card slot enabling you to expand the storage space on your PhotoFrame offering plenty of space for all your memories.Remember the fun you had working with your photos in the past – such as cutting them and creating nice collections! Collage pro is a unique and advanced feature provided by Philips digital PhotoFrame. Just like on other Philips digital PhotoFrames with Collage function, you can run collage slideshows automatically. With Collage Pro, you can also edit and create collages by yourself. more info

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

V. Bindal May 12, 2010 at 10:37 am

Worst kind of electronic I’ve ever seen
Rating:1 out of 5 stars
I have just received this Philips product. The software is not even a bit friendly. It has got a huge, complicated and snail speed interface. Most irritating part is buttons and that too on back of the frame. So you just keep flipping the frame to press the right button and to see the result on screen. Buttons are so hard to press. The back support is immovable. Last but not the least, zoom and crop don’t work at all. It keeps showing black borders for all photos whatever aspect ratio they have. I’m completely fed up of this worst kind of electronic piece I ever had. I gonna return this immediately.

The Bookie May 22, 2010 at 12:20 am

Philips 8FF3CDW
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
I’ve been looking for a digital photo frame as a gift for my Mother for a long time. She does not use a computer, so a digital photo frame would be a perfect gift for her to look at the digital photos we take nowadays.

I originally had my eyes on the Sony DPF-V900. Then I saw Philips 10FF3CDW (the 10″ version of this frame) at a store. Picture quality looked good even right next to the Sony (aesthetic-wise it isn’t as sleek as the Sony). It is larger and much cheaper. So I bought the Philips 10″ photo frame. Played w it for about a week. Really liked its features and simplicity. Unfortunately it had a dead pixel that always lit up in red right in the middle of the display and the installation CD that came w it was blank (no software or user’s manual).

I was also tired of looking at the black borders on both sides of the display due to its 15:9 ratio. I don’t know why they even make the 15:9 aspect ratio. My wife’s Cannon takes 4:3 photos while my daughter’s and my Nikon DSLRs take 3:2 photos. None of them fit the 15:9. You can do the cropping to fill the display but I found it much easier to crop the sides to fit a 4:3 frame than to crop top and bottom to fit a 15:9 frame. Also the 480 horizontal resolution simply does not cut it. Details in the photo were being dropped (most of today’s 15:9 frames are 800×480, including the Sony V900. They would all have this problem. Sony has come out w a 10″ V1000 w a 1024×600 resolution which should improve the image quality). So I decided to return the 10FF3CDW and to look for a 4:3 800×600 frame.

I looked at the 8″ frames from Sony, HP, Samsung, Coby and others. I decided to give Philips another try w their 8″ version. It is reasonably priced and picture quality looks good. I am not disappointed. Compared to the 10″ 15:9 version, pictures are sharper w more details. Colors are truthful too.

The things I like:

- Image quality is very good

- Price, it is relatively cheap

- USB host function, so you can display photo files from external USB thumb drive (not USB HD)

or camera directly

- Auto on/off w either light or time control. It goes to sleep when you do

- Low power consumption, just 4.6W

- Calendar and clock work well (have not tried alarm yet)

- Auto orientation optimizes picture viewing

- On-frame photo editing. Cropping is especially useful for getting rid of the black borders

from 3:2 aspect ratio photos

- Lots of languages to select. My Mom would love her native one

What I don’t like:

- Photo Manager can copy photos only from PC to photo frame’s internal memory but not

to plugged in memory cards.

- Should support USB HD as well. This opens up a whole new world.

- The look is so so, not as sleek or good looking as the Sony or HP

- Control buttons are hard to use and not very responsive.

Overall I give it a 4 star for its features, price and very good picture quality.

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