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Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black)

Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black)
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Manufacturer: Sony
Buy Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black)
 

Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black) Features

10-inch Digital Photo Frame,; 4:3 aspect ratio; 800 x 600 TFT Active Matrix LCD
Includes 256MB internal memory, with optional image resizing (to maximize internal memory).
Compatible with all main memory card types
Auto orientation sensor and auto image rotation
Features 10 slideshow styles, 2 clock modes, calendar mode, and 2 index views
 

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Additional Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black) Information

Sony’s DPF-D100 Digital Photo Frame stores up to 500 1.5 MP images and gives you the option to display single photos, multiple thumbnails, or slideshow presentations. The 10-inch widescreen (4:3) LCD screen showcases your cherished memories in vivid color, while an Auto Orientation sensor automatically rotates your photos into portrait or landscape format. Direct input from most digital cameras and memory cards makes it easy for virtually anyone to transfer photos, and an included remote control provides added convenience.

 

What Customers Say About Sony DPF-D100 10.4-Inch LCD Digital Photo Frame (Black):

I ordered this item for my husband for Father's day. Very easy to use and the slide show options are great (calendar w/pics, clock w/pics, etc). It's sleek appearance is perfect for my husband's office. Pictures are beautifully displayed and so clear.

Outstanding picure quality and user-friendly instruction manual. It has a lot of features I may never use, but I am enjoying playing with them. A high quality frame that I am happy with and glad I spent a few more $$ on.

Well the internet is full of people who either think product X is the best thing since sliced bread, or have an axe to grind with the manufacturer. There is one gotcha here though which isn't mentioned in the manual, and is buried deep in the product FAQ on Sony's website : when you connect this frame to your PC via USB, you can ONLY upload images to the frame's inbuilt memory. Another nice feature here - you can set the date display to American or rest-of-world - ie. Whilst this isn't a biggie, if you don't have a separate card reader for your chosen type of memory card, it's a pain having to shuffle images everywhere. That being said, I don't think you'll regret this purchase - it simply is that good.So why 4 stars and not 5. One thing I was pleased to see was the option to set the inbuilt clock to 24 hour mode.

Very few products warrant a full-on 5-star review because most products have one or more features that a chunk of the buyers won't like. The picture display itself can be "original aspect" which shows the whole picture with black bars padding the screen where necessary, or it can be "zoom to fit" in which case the image is zoomed slightly to entirely fill the display.The frame comes with 1Gb of built-in memory as well as memory card slots for most types of card. So 4 stars is my rating here - ie. The quality of the LCD panel seems to be top notch with a bright, clear display and a pretty wide viewing angle.

For the most part, you'll typically end up in random picture mode, and random fade/swipe mode. I filled my frame with all sorts of images including straight-from-the-camera JPGs and ones that had been altered via Photoshop. And finally, the non-camera images problem seems vastly reduced now. The frame can be oriented in landscape or portrait mode and it auto-rotates the pictures to suit. You can hang it on the wall though - it has keyed notches in the back for that purpose. All in all, a good choice if not a little pricey. A little too much gravy for a photo frame if you ask me.The slideshow modes have the usual array of fades and swipes, as well as sequenced or random image mode.

Out of 400 images, only two didn't display, and they turned out to be TIFF images I'd put on by mistake. The screw-in "foot" which makes up the frame's stand is quite long (for stability) which means that you can't push this frame up against a wall when placing it on furniture - it's going to stand out quite a way. With the Sony remote, you can fiddle with the photo frame remotely, including all the setup and display features. Not so in this case. In simple mode, you just give it an on and off time and that's it.

Having upgraded from a smaller Philips digital photo frame, the Sony DPF-V1000 is a welcome surprise.Before getting in to the meat of the review, I feel it's worth pointing out a couple of improvements in the product right up front.A lot of reviews here complain about three common gripes:- the illuminated Sony logo on the frame- when you're in date/time mode, the frame only displays the date and time the photo was taken- non-camera images don't displayI bought my frame on June 28th 2009 and all these items have either been fixed, or the other reviewers didn't read the manual far enough. OK so you can read the dimensions in the product specs but when it arrives, the box is huge, and the frame is much larger than you might imagine. The slideshow delay has several preset options from every 3 seconds right up to once a day for the picture change. In complex mode (the default setting) you can set multiple on/off times for individual days of the week. Realistically, I think the card slots are there for straight-from-the-camera image viewing, rather than long-term storage.There are plenty of setup options to keep the both the nerdiest photo frame enthusiast and the absolute beginner happy. It has hidden benefits too - for example if you've got the frame set to refresh every half hour and you decide you don't like the current picture, you don't need to wait - just click 'next' on the remote and on you go.As with most digiframes, this one has an auto on/off function where you can tell it when you want it to turn itself on and off. As well as the clock, there's a calendar built in too, and in many of the display modes, you can show the clock and/or calendar along with the photo.

Any cards plugged in do not show up - you either need to load them up separately, or copy images to them using the frame's inbuilt copy tools. Otherwise, images taken from 8 or 9 different makes and models of camera all showed perfectly, as well as those taken from 5 different cellphone cameras.So on to the frame itself - what's it like. It has a simple and complex mode of operation for this feature. There is a smorgasbord of date and time modes available too, most of which will display the current date and time rather than the date and time the photo was taken. Common choices like 5 minutes, 10 minutes and half an hour are all present and correct.You can do some rudimentary image editing in the frame although any serious amount of image touchup is out of the question. Having said that, 1Gb of onboard memory holds a respectable number of images - enough that you might not need an expansion card.

I don't think the perfect 5-star digital photo frame exists yet. Sure you're paying for the Sony name, but if they did an identical model with all the frills removed - ie. The illuminated Sony logo can be turned off via the setup options now. It has a scrapbook mode where you can frame the pictures with backgrounds and other add-on graphics although it does seem a bit pointless to buy a large digiframe and then deliberately shrink the images you're displaying on it.In short - this frame has more than enough features for the technophile, whilst being pretty easy to just pick up and use for those who want to throw some photos on and be done with it. You can't argue with the clarity of the LCD panel either.

My old Philips frame had no remote so all changes needed to be done using the frame's hardware buttons. The clock has an alarm mode which can be turned on or off using a slide switch on top of the frame.

Seems a little pointless to me, but then I have a clock radio to wake me up in the morning.The included remote control is a nice feature. Oddly, bigger than you might think.

Those two review types account for 5-star and zero-star reviews. Why anyone still uses AM/PM in this day and age is a mystery to me, yet so many consumer electrical products insist on the 12 hour format.

month-day-year or day-month-year respectively. no touchup mode, no alarm, no scrapbook mode and no card slots, that would be a product with more mass-market appeal.

it's a bloody good piece of kit but it's not perfect.

It is especially an eye sore if the frame is in a dimly lit space. Sony illuminates their name on the bottom part of the frame. I find it very annoying for the Sony brand name to compete with every photo that is displayed. The photos are even more stunning, then the illimunated Sony is even more bold between photos when the background has faded to black.The HP df820a2 has equally dazzling pictures, is equally easy to use, and does is not in your face with an illuminated logo. I find the HP a better choice.

OMG after buying and returning 6 different digital picture frames I finally found the digital picture frame I LOVE. I wanted to upload and bingo - NO Problems. Of course I own a sony camera so that might make this picture frame make my pictures look awesome. I plug in my Duo and hit the pic. The screen is not dark, it does not chop off part of my photos, the pictures are crips and clean. The only down side is that you cannot zoom in on your photos.But believe me when you have gone through what I have gone through with other digital pic frames that is nothing.

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