Touchscreens added to newest digital frames
Photos from sharing, social networking sites can also be added to your mix
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Options include frames that have touch icons, as well as models that do double duty. One has speakers and room for an iPod; another comes with a built-in printer.
New services let you share photos wirelessly from Web sites such as Flickr and Picasa, two popular photo-sharing sites, as well as from Facebook and other social networking sites.
Industry pioneer Ceiva, which came out with the first digital photo frame in 2000, and is subscription-based, says it has improved its customer Web site to make it easier to upload photos and customize them for delivery to those who have Ceiva frames.
And, frames are getting bigger in size, as well as appeal. Last fall, 7-inch frames seemed to rule as the size most favored by consumers, largely because of their lower prices, generally between $60 and $100.
“We’re certainly seeing larger frames enter the marketplace,” said Ross Rubin, an analyst for The NPD Group research firm.
Now, “there are a lot of 8- and 10-inch frames being introduced, as companies seek to offer a more premium-priced product, and drive a bit more profit in a category that became very competitive last holiday season.”
So popular are the frames as gift items — not only for Mother’s Day, but for Father’s Day and graduations in the weeks ahead — Circuit City is holding digital photo frame demonstrations at all its stores around the country on May 4.
Kodak and Pandigital were the No. 1 and 2 brands, respectively, in the digital frame market for the first quarter of this year, according to NPD. Next in order of ranking were Coby, Westinghouse and Smartparts, Inc.
There are many manufacturers now making digital photo frames. ViewSonic, known for its computer displays, also entered the field this year, and D-Link, known for its wireless routers, will do so shortly.
“This past year, I think we counted 67 different (manufacturers’) frames out there,” said Daryl Joslin, Ceiva vice president of marketing.
They have the touch
Both Kodak and Pandigital are offering touch controls on their newest frames this spring. The touch approach eliminates the need for a remote or fiddling with buttons on the top or back of frames.
“We did away with the remote control because it was kind of clunky, using a little, tiny remote with all the small buttons,” said Nancy Carr of Kodak.
Kodak is using its “Quick Touch Border” on two frames so far, its 8-inch, EasyShare M820 ($180) and 10-inch EasyShare M1020 ($230).
The touch buttons are along the bottom and right side of the frames’ borders. “You don’t see the icons unless you activate them,” Carr said.
“They pop up, and they close down again. You have the same functionality as with a remote, and you don’t touch the screen, which could leave fingerprints on it.”
Pandigital recently announced its PanTouch frames in three sizes: a 7-inch ($120), 8-inch ($170) and 10.4-inch ($250) frame, to be available this month.
Icon controls for touch and swiping are on the screen itself, and “the touch-operation matting resists fingerprints in the viewable area, so the frame always looks great,” the company said in a news release.
Each frame will also come with a remote control, for those who don’t want to go the touch route.
For novelty, Mustek offers a black, 7-inch frame with speakers and an integrated docking station for an iPod. The PF-i700 can be found at online retailers such as Amazon and Buy.com for about $110.
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Smartparts, Inc. Smartparts' 8-inch frame comes with a built-in printer. Each printer cartridge can produce 36 prints. |
Meanwhile, Smartparts has an 8-inch, dark wood frame that comes with a built-in printer, and it retails for around $260.
The printer uses dye-sublimation technology, includes photo paper and can produce three dozen 4-by-6 prints with each cartridge. Replacement cartridges cost between $20 and $25.
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