Coby 10" Widescreen Digital Photo Frame With Built-In MP3 Player
Starting at: $80.70
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: David Carnoy
- Released on:
- Reviewed on:
The good: This relatively inexpensive, 10.2-inch wide-screen photo frame has respectable resolution (800x640), slots for virtually all memory card types, as well as USB connectivity for cameras and thumbdrives. The frame also supports MP3 and allegedly video playback (there are built-in speakers on the back) and ships with a small remote control and second interchangeable faceplate to customize the frame's look.
The bad: The built-in speakers sound tinny, there's no internal memory available to the user, and video playback is sketchy at best.
The bottom line: The Coby DP-102 10.2-inch digital photo frame was better than we expected--especially for its relatively modest price--but we had trouble getting it to play back videos, which forced us to lower its rating.
The Coby brand is synonymous with budget-priced equipment, which is the polite way we electronics reviewers go about describing cheap gear--and the company's 10.2-inch DP-102 digital photo frame is indeed cheap compared to competing products with similar screen sizes. This model also happens to boast a wide-screen display rather than the more standard 4:3 aspect ratio. However, screen shape aside, what's surprising about this Coby frame is that it actually gets a lot of things right and its image quality isn't half bad.
More and more digital frames are mimicking the look of the display ... Expand full review
The Coby brand is synonymous with budget-priced equipment, which is the polite way we electronics reviewers go about describing cheap gear--and the company's 10.2-inch DP-102 digital photo frame is indeed cheap compared to competing products with similar screen sizes. This model also happens to boast a wide-screen display rather than the more standard 4:3 aspect ratio. However, screen shape aside, what's surprising about this Coby frame is that it actually gets a lot of things right and its image quality isn't half bad.
More and more digital frames are mimicking the look of the display on Apple's original iMac flat-panel all-in-one computers. This Coby's cosmetics aren't as slick as that of Philips photo frames (its plastics just aren't of the same quality), but stand a few feet away and it looks just fine, with a clear acrylic frame around a black or white faceplate that surrounds the 8.75 x 5.25-inch (10.2-inch diagonal) LCD panel. While you can go with white--the faceplates are interchangeable--images tend to look a little better framed by a black border. The flip-out stand on the back allows you to prop the frame up horizontally or vertically (again, the stand feels a little cheap, but it seems to get the job done okay) and there are keyhole slots on the back of the frame that give you the option of mounting the DP-102 on a wall with a few screws (not included).
The frame does have a few quirky issues. For instance, there's an option for copying an image, but there doesn't appear to be any internal memory, so all you can do is copy between cards, or between cards and thumbdrives. Also, we were unable to get the frame to play back any of the AVI or MPEG4 files we threw at it, including video captured using Canon and Casio digital cameras. We suspect that it will play back videos shot with some cameras, but certainly not most--so proceed at your own risk when it comes to video. (We would have fiddled around with the aspect ratio--there's a button on the remote for switching between 4:3 and--but since we couldn't get any videos to play, we never got a chance to see if it worked).
There isn't much more to say about the Coby DP-102. Overall, this is a fairly basic frame that offers decent image quality and few extra features, one of which (video playback) doesn't work as well as it should. If the frame had cost $200, we'd have been a little harder on it, but at around $140 online, this isn't a bad deal.
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Hunkered down in New York City, Executive Editor David Carnoy covers the gamut of gadgets and writes his Fully Equipped column, which carries the tag line "The electronics you lust for." He's also the author of "Knife Music," a novel that's available at Amazon, bn.com, and as a Kindle, iBooks, or Nook e-book.
User Reviews
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Most recent user reviews
Showing 3 of 3 reviews
"Video playback was terrible!!" By poolguy995
Pros: Remote control was excellent
Cons: Could not get video/movies to play back smoothly, very choppy and out of sync with sound. Tried both AVI and MPEG4 without success.
"terrible product" By Sojourner74
Pros: fairly clear image, remote easy to use, acceptable number of options for slideshows
Cons: no reliability whatsoever. worked for 3 months then died. I'll never buy a Coby product again.
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Device type: Digital photo frame
- Display Type: TFT 10 in - Color
- Supported audio formats: WMA MP3