| Kodak EasyShare P725 7 inch high-resolution Digital Photo Frame, with 4000 image storage capacity - Black | 
| Brand: Kodak Category: CE
List Price: £69.99 Buy New: £38.10 as of 29/7/2010 11:57 CDT details You Save: £31.89 (46%)
New (14) Used (3) from £32.97
Seller: Amazon.co.uk Rating: 59 reviews
Media: Electronics Batteries Included: No Display Size: 7 Size: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7 x 2.9
MPN: P725 Model: P725 UPC: 041771357283 EAN: 5051395892621 ASIN: B002GP7TR4
Release Date: September 30, 2009 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
| |
| Similar Items:
| |
| Customer Reviews: a superb product November 22, 2009 Mr. Anthony Grossman 199 out of 202 found this review helpful
i purchased the Kodak digital frame last week, & it was delivered(as promised!) within 3 days!! well done Amazon!
it was extremely easy to set up & use. The quality of the photos very good & pin sharpe.
the main advantage of this product is the fact that it has an internal 512 mb memory, which means you can store
thousands of pictures without having a memory card inserted the whole time. It's very good value & certainly better than more expensive digital photo frames.
Kodak Easyshare Digital photo frame November 25, 2009 wed1867 (Cheshire, England) 121 out of 123 found this review helpful
Excellent value (& I paid more than it is being offered for now)
Easy to operate. Bought for 80th birthday present & thought it might faze the recipient, but it is so easy they coped admirably with it.
Put 82 photos on a 1Gb SD card which took only a very thin sliver of its memory. But there is no need to buy additional memory as it has 512mb of internal memory, which they say can already take up to 4000 photos.
Ordered & delivered quickly by Amazon. Will buy from Amazon again & may well buy another of ths product for myself.
Good display, very easy to use, let down by a few simple shortcomings December 3, 2009 Enzo Ferrari (Sunny Wiltshire, England) 124 out of 127 found this review helpful
I too bought this frame for an older person to use, so I wanted one that would be simple to operate. In that respect its perfect, very few buttons to press or long complex menus to navigate.
Also the display itself is very good, with good bright colours and a nice amount of contrast. The frame itself looks like quality and is well put together.
Its not perfect though, firstly it lacks any way of standing it in portrait mode, so pictures taken that way up cant be dispayed properly, this would have been such a simple provision to make I feel there is little excuse for it. Secondly, it has no thumbnail function, so you have to sit through every picture on the frame to find a particular one to display. This can take ages if you have lots of pictures stored on it. As the frame itself is black its a pity the power supply and connecting cable is white, that spoils the elegant look a little. Finally, the product description claims it has 'transition effects', but in fact it doesnt have any at all, just a variation in the speed whith which the pictures change, I dont regard this as crucial, but you should be aware of it before you purchase this frame.
Good image quality, not so good software December 6, 2009 redcatoo 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
My main concern when buying a digital photo frame was image quality - I'd seen other people's and wasn't impressed. But I'm pleased with it - the colours are bright and the resolution ok (I think you have to spend lot more money to get better resolution, and I'm not sure it's worth it unless you sit six inches away when you view your photos).
So, I'm pleased with it, but there are a couple of negative points:
It automatically resizes your photos when you copy them across, which is an excellent idea, allowing you to put loads of photos on the internal memory. But... I tried copying a few hundred hi-res (6-10Mpixel) photos onto it and I think it just couldn't cope. Some of the photos got corrupted and the frame would just hang when it got to them. Maybe if you only did a few at a time, or if they weren't that big in the first place it would be fine.
I got round this by resizing them first using the batch convert feature on Irfanview, which you can download for free from the internet (nothing to do with Kodak). This worked fine.
The available slide show modes are limited, but this may be the case on other frames as well. You get a choice of 5, 10 or 60 seconds but the 10 second setting does this nauseating (literally) pan and zoom thing. 5 seconds is a bit fast, but 60 is ideal if you just want a constantly changing picture, rather than watching them all as a slide show.
Decent for the price but has come with faults & niggles. Where's the USB?! January 1, 2010 M. L. Hobson (Sheffield UK) 39 out of 41 found this review helpful
I bought this frame as a present for my parents who arn't technically minded and would have been flawed with many of the frames currently on the market!
I have researched many frames as I bought one for myself, I ended up with the NIX 8" £100 frame (NIX Designer Series Cordless 8 inch Digital Photo Frame, Internal Rechargeable Battery, Genuine High Resolution SVGA Screen 800 x 600, 1GB Internal Memory, Auto Rotate Sensor, 'Blue Lite' Touch Sensitive Controls - TS08C) earlier this year after reading lots of reviews and realising you really do get what you pay for! My NIX is a top end product with many features and was costly so I can't compare the two but i can't help it just slightly!
My brief was: something simple, easy to use, with internal memory so all my parents had to do was turn it on an enjoy, no buttons, no remote and this KODAK frame seemed to fit the job. It had good reviews and was good value for money £39.99 is an excellent price.
My major moan in NO USB! This has caused me no end of hassle! I think this would be a real bonus, no, not bonus, essential! It's such a pain without one, ok, maybe i'm doing it the long way round but it taken me ages versus plugging in my frame via USB and having pictures.
For those with SD cards etc and just wanting to see all the photos without having specific ones on there it's easy and does the job as you just stick it in and have an instant slide show and for the majority on here this is all that's needed.....
.... However my parents don't have digital cameras etc so i'm having to use a variety of family SD cards in an integral card reader, onto the laptop then uploading them onto SD and then into the frames internal memory as the SD cards are needed in people's cameras!
If i'd had a USB I could have just uploaded from iphoto straight to the frame.
If there is a frame of similar spec and price WITH a USB buy it.
The frame is neat and I cannot fault the picture, the colour and definition are good.
This is a basic frame with no frills but that's want I wanted.
There are 3 picture speeds, 5sec, 10sec and 60sec. Only the 10sec offers a range of fade out, different moves etc. The other two just move to the next photo.
Can either shuffle photos or just have them shown in order.
For me the buttons aren't very responsive and i've had to really press the 'next' buttons, sometimes twice for them to move to next pic.
There is the option to delete a photo whilst on the screen, something i like and which my expensive frame doesn't have.
I also like the COPY button which allows you to copy 1 or all the photos showing from USB/SD etc. I have to say i really like this and is very simple.
There is no internal battery so has to be plugged in constantly to view.
I had a few problems uploading pictures and kept getting an 'unknown error message' flashing on the screen, i've not been able to find out why, I have deleted everything and started again twice! I found the Kodak website unhelpful and their online technical help a waste of time as they only deal with camera queries. I even rang the 0870 helpline which wasn't much better, said it could possibly be the format of my photos not being compatible with Kodak (even though they are all JPEG) she suggested i upload them all through their Easyshare software which i shouldn't have to do!!?? (and don't know how to!?) and haven't had to do with previous frames.
I am currently sat watching all the pictures do a run through and if it happens again it will be going back to Amazon.
This frame is good for:
Technophobes
Plug and go SD/USB to frame
Not good for:
People who want to put specific photos from different places onto one SD card/flashstick/internal memory as it's time consuming and fiddly!
Having a top end NIX £100 frame v KODAK £40 frame I have experienced both end of the market. If you are looking for a frame for yourself invest in a good one, it's worth paying out the extra as you really do get what you pay for, especially in terms of quality.
For myself i'm really glad i bought the expensive one, I'd never had one before was worried at the time as thought i'd spent too much but iI now see where the quality lies ans what you get.
Having both my essentials in a frame would be:
8" (it does make a difference)
good internal memory
auto rotate
internal battery
USB cable direct upload
This Kodak is a good frame for the money and ideal as a present for parents/grandparents who will only be viewing photos and probably not altering/uploading etc.
Would I buy this again? No.
Hope this helps someone x
|
|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON EU S.à.r.l. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
www.ebay.co.uk
Copyright Thalasar Ventures
| |