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Philips 7FF2FPA/05 7" Digital Photoframe | 
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| Brand: Philips Category: CE
Buy New: £59.99
New (2) Used (4) Refurbished (1) from £41.49
Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 200
Media: Electronics Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.1 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 9.5 x 4.2
MPN: 7FF2FPA/05 Model: 7FF2FPA/05 EAN: 8712581381189 ASIN: B000YETA26
Release Date: December 6, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description View, share, organise and relive your memories with the 7FF2FPA photo frame from Philips! The 7FF2FPA is the easiest way to display your digital photos in stunning quality. It has a beautiful 7? screen, seven handy buttons and loads of fantastic features, including random play and special effects. It also has a 16 MB internal memory so you can manage photos, and a modern design to really make them shine!
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
Does exactly what it says on the box July 6, 2008 Ruth M-L 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Philips 7FF2FPA/05 7" Photoframe I wanted a photo frame for my birthday and I looked around, and did my "homework", made a lot easier I must say by having the ability to look at the instruction booklets for Phillips products on their website. I wanted one that would just display my photos, not play music. I wanted one that would turn itself on and off. And one that would take all cards formats and that's what it does, no bells or whistles just a frame displaying my photos. You are able to set the display time from 1 minute to one day and have random or sequential display of your photos and have a verity of transitions from one photo to next and that's it - simple. I found that some of my portrait photos had to be manipulated in order that they could be displayed on the frame when it was standing landscape and I would suppose visa versa I haven't tried the internal memory, why would you if it takes so many cards, also with no internal battery you have to reset the clock and date every time the power is switched off in order to hook it up to the computer. I haven't had it long but the first few days look very promising
Does the Job Well June 29, 2008 SkatertnyP (Poland) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
We ordered one for my elderly mother. We have just set it up - handy to have a few teenage sons around to do this quickly. It needs a memory card - the device's own storage capacity seems to cope with only some twenty pictures. We linked it to our PC then dragged dozens of pictures into the hard drive card duly inserted. Worked a treat first time. Picture quality good, although the screen is not that big. Main problem? Buttons on the device eg to set the sequencing frequency are fiddly. Best to link to a PC then eg rotate pictures there. But once it is all set up an excellent product for the price.
"Excellent, if a little small" May 20, 2008 Dr. Richard Dudley (Inverness, Scotland) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
I wanted a digital photoframe for my parents, but never having owned one was unsure what to look for. Eventually I decided, mainly based on Amazon reviews, that I wanted one with a good resolution, random play option and a good range of times between transitions. Some frames have low (c400 x 200) resolutions, others have no random feature and some with a random feature have a very short maximum transition time (only a few minutes). This little Philips frame fits the bill. It has a viewable area of 720 x 480 resolution, with random play and transition times from 5 seconds to 12 hours. There are two card slots for a variety of memory cards and you can also connect via a USB cable to a PC or pen drive. There's 16MB of internal memory, but that's too small to be of much use. You can set the time and date and also set the unit to switch itself on and off. Useful for ensuring that the unit displays pictures during the day without having to switch it on and off. There's no internal battery so if you unplug the system you lose the time and date, and also the auto on and off settings. The transition type (sequential or random), transition interval and type (fade, etc) seem to be stored on the memory cards and are not lost on power off. The unit can be set up for landscape and portrait, but it does crop (rather than stretch or compress) images that do not fit the format. Thus portrait close-ups are cropped top and bottom when displayed on the frame set as landscape. There's the usual functions to view pictures as thumbnails and to rotate and delete (all or selected) pictures. The thumbnail view shows the date the picture was taken and the native resolution but you cannot view the filename of the picture. Finally you can adjust brightness and other options such as sound (beep) and background colour (black, white, grey) for when a picture does not quite fill the screen. So, overall an excellent little device with only a few drawbacks. The screen is a little small with a 6.5" diagonal (and 3:2 aspect ratio) - I wish I'd bought a bigger one. The lack of battery back up is annoying, as is the fact that the manual was written by someone whose first language wasn't human. The manual is also quite partial, not covering all the unit's features. However if you play around with the menus you'll soon get the hang of it. I could not get all the information I needed (especially random transition times) from the web so I e-mailed Philips. Their customer service is excellent (not a phrase you often hear) and they answered my query fully and within 24 hours. If you need more information, drop them a line. EDIT I originally used this with a Fuji 1GB SD card, factory formated as FAT. Everything was fine until I tried to copy more than 250 files, at which an error occurred. Per the web this is a common fault with FAT. I reformatted with NTFS and everything was fine - can put 1000's of images on the card. But the frame will not read NTFS formatted cards. The only thing that will work for more than 250 images is FAT32. For some reason this is very very slow for file transfer on my (new) Vista laptop. In addition if I remove the card from the laptop and re-insert it, the laptop will not recognise it - need to reboot to see it again. So a real pain to get more than 250 images onto the card, but happily this is not something I need to do very often. Philips' customer services were as good as ever and they confirm that the frame will only read FAT32 formatted cards, and only up to 2GB.
Replaced Frame twice May 14, 2008 S. Brill (UK) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Although the photo quality is good, the device has broken twice and I have had to get it replaced. It seems that when loading photo's on and removing the USB lead it corrupts and then is of no more use than a door stop!!
Comparison shop March 31, 2008 Elizabeth Bear 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
Having acquired 3 different frames for Christmas, the pro's and con's of each were more obvious. The most disappointing aspect of the Philips frame is the lamentably small memory - a mere 16MB compared with 128 for the BT equivalent.
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