Toshiba DMF82XKU 8-inch Digital Media Frame (black)
Starting at: $179.88
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Joshua Goldman
- Released on:
- Reviewed on:
The good: Attractive design; good support for files, memory cards; easy Wi-Fi setup process.
The bad: FrameChannel support issues; wide screen not ideal for photos; frame attracts fingerprints.
The bottom line: The Toshiba DMF82XKU 8-inch Digital Media Frame is a decent photo-viewing choice for Picasa, Facebook, and Flickr fans, but the overall package could use some polish and probably a firmware update.
Digital frames can be divided into two categories: connected digital media frames and digital photo frames. The Toshiba DMF82XKU 8-inch Digital Media Frame, is--surprise--one of the former. It easily connects to a Wi-Fi network for access to photo collections from a variety of online sources as well as letting you enjoy music and video via its card slots and USB ports. The Toshiba Digital Media Frame should satisfy those doing a majority of their photo viewing from social-networking and photo-sharing Web sites, but if you're not living a "connected" lifestyle, get something else or wait for Toshiba's next ... Expand full review
Digital frames can be divided into two categories: connected digital media frames and digital photo frames. The Toshiba DMF82XKU 8-inch Digital Media Frame, is--surprise--one of the former. It easily connects to a Wi-Fi network for access to photo collections from a variety of online sources as well as letting you enjoy music and video via its card slots and USB ports. The Toshiba Digital Media Frame should satisfy those doing a majority of their photo viewing from social-networking and photo-sharing Web sites, but if you're not living a "connected" lifestyle, get something else or wait for Toshiba's next round of frames.
The frame has a high-end modern-electronics look to it. It's a 16:9 wide-screen display with an 800x480-pixel resolution, so unless you're shooting photos in that aspect ratio (cameras generally default to 4:3), your photos will be cropped and stretched to fill the display. You can choose to view full photos, too, but then you'll have black bars around pictures.
On back are stereo speakers; card slots for SD/SDHC, MMC, Memory Stick/Memory Stick Duo, and xD cards; USB and miniUSB 2.0 ports; and a headphone jack. Plus, you can connect a multislot USB memory-card reader and the frame will recognize and read from up to five memory cards (though I couldn't get this to work). A simple support screws into the back letting you stand it in landscape or portrait positions and an autorotation sensor adjusts photos accordingly. Toshiba put its branding on back of the glossy black body, too, keeping it from looking too much like the company's TVs. The entire chassis is a fingerprint magnet, though, and it doesn't help that most of the frame's controls are touch sensitive. Simply running a finger in front of the right side of the frame lights them up. The controls are sensitive enough that you can minimize fingerprints by using a very light touch. Or you can use the remote control.
The included remote has all the same options as the frame's touch controls as well as some extras making navigating content and settings easier. A Slideshow Style button, for example, lets you pick from six transition types: Music and Photos, Blend, Horizontal Shutter, Stack, Snap Shot, and the poorly named Erase, which is actually a left-to-right wipe. Most of these are photo-frame standards, though Snap Shot is somewhat unique in that it displays photos in Polaroid-like frames pinned to a corkboard background with times and dates of when they were taken. On the remote control are also buttons for rotating images, switching to clock/calendar mode, zooming in on photos, and viewing thumbnails or music files (it can't see folders, unfortunately).
The menus are reasonably straightforward lists with only an occasionally unclear name. Toshiba put Menu, Options, and Mode buttons on the remote, too, which can get confusing if you don't know what you're looking for or can't remember what to press for a particular function. Menu is for general settings, while Mode is for accessing different media types as well as all of the same stuff the single-function buttons do, and Options is for displaying photo info or saving a photo to the frame's 1GB of memory. Sacrificing one of these for a direct link to the online services would be welcomed.
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Josh started writing about consumer tech more than a decade ago covering everything from software and computers to home theater and audio equipment. He currently covers digital cameras and camcorders for CNET, but occasionally spouts off about other things like laptops, tablets, apps, and anything to do with listening to music.
User Reviews
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Showing 3 of 3 reviews
"pure trash" By parabox1
Pros: none nothing is good about this product
Cons: frame channel is a ***** to use tech support sucks touch screen buttons do not work well or at all some times odd issues with it making and playing files that it does not support
Summary: Do not buy it ever. I have 2 want one!!
"Poorly Executed Product" By gdasmalchi
Pros: Picture Quality (when it works) is nice.
Cons: Buggy - no firmware update after many months...abandoned product?
Summary: Really wanted to like this product, as the feature set (WiFi, Picasa, etc.) seemed promising. Got the WiFi to work, but when accessing a Picasa album it selects/shows just a small subset of the album to which it's pointed. *Maybe* this is a Google issue, but good luck ... Expand full review
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Device type: Digital photo frame
- Display Type: TFT 8 in - Color
- Supported audio formats: MP3 WMA