easyshare w1020 manual
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easyshare w1020 manualSlide to highlight a music source then tap OK. See page 30. See Chapter, Viewing pictures and videos for all the ways you can enjoy your pictures, videos, and music on your frame. Or, tap OK to see the pictures as thumbnails. We're committed to dealing with such abuse according to the laws in your country of residence. When you submit a report, we'll investigate it and take the appropriate action. We'll get back to you only if we require additional details or have more information to share. Note that email addresses and full names are not considered private information. Please mention this; Therefore, avoid filling in personal details. The manual is 4,51 mb in size. If you have not received an email, then probably have entered the wrong email address or your mailbox is too full. In addition, it may be that your ISP may have a maximum size for emails to receive. Check your email Please enter your email address. Eastman Kodak Company is an authorized licensee of the CompactFlash trademark.Setting up your frame Setting up the stand Your frame displays pictures in landscape orientation. To change to portrait orientation, see page 65.Your power cable may look different from the one pictured.Do not touch it. Lights appear on the borders (upper right and bottom) to show you where to touch. CAUTION: Only use your finger to touch the borders. Using sharp or metal objects may damage the border or screen. Home Tap a border to display the icons. Play slide show Choose OK or TaSlide to highlight your language, then tap Save. To use the Quick Touch Borders, sFollow the automated troubleshooting wizard. Connecting to your wireless network To allow your frame to access the contents of your computer wirelessly, connect your frame to your wireless home network. NOTE: If you are not sure you have a wNOTE: If the scan finds multiple networks, your home network (with the highest signal strength) is usually listed first and highlighted. Tap OK.http://dopratae.com/userfiles/cricket-a300-manual.xml
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Or, to select another network, slide or tap below the arrows to highlight a network, then tap OK. Slider Slider arrows You can slide to highlight Exit without connecting, then tap OK (or tap Back) to dismiss the screen and go to the Home screen (see page 30). If you want tIf your wireless network is still not found, your network does not broadcast SSIDs. You then need to enter your network SSID (sometimes called the network name) manually: a. Select Enter SSID, then tap OK. The on-screen keyboard appears. b. Using the on-screen keyboardA WEP security key can See page 15 to open your frame’s Device Settings page in your browser to start setting access to Web content and customizing your frame.The network connection setup screen appears. Scan later Scan now If you forgot to install the software, tap Back then install the software (see page 9). When you are done installing the software on your computer, tap OK on your Tap Done to close the window. If your computer is not listed, tap Scan again or tap Help for options. You have completed the frame setup. Your frame can now access your host computer, wirelessly. Your computer appears as a picture source icon on your frame’s Home screen (see page 30). 4 Tap (Home) to start viewing your pictures. NOTE: If you have more than one frSee page 15 to open your frame’s Device Settings page in your browser to start setting access to Web content and customizing your frame from your computer. On your computer, use KODAK EASYSHARE Digital Display Software (see page 12) to set up access to the KODAK Gallery and RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feeds such as pub. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. See All Buying Options Add to Wish List Disabling it will result in some disabled or missing features.http://fechart.com/userfiles/cricket-a210-phone-manual.xml You can still see all customer reviews for the product. Do not use smart crop (fastone) or your pictures will get headless people. Do not let frame re-size pictures. Images are truly amazing. Additional info: Delete all pictures etc.All wireless options work as advertised, including all the web options. HOWEVER, it helps to know what you are doing. Use a descent set of computer speakers (powered) connected to the audio out port on the side of the frame for better sound, this will by-pass the internal undersized speakers. This frame has many more options than most other frames on the market. With those options, comes complexity. Taken as a whole, this is one technical marvel for a good price. Stick to the basics and you will be more than pleased. The only other frame to come close to competing with this one is a Sony. Without sound, without wireless, without internet, without mp3 player input and all at a higher cost. Kodak did an excellent job of designing a feature rich frame on the cutting edge of technology. If you are firewall saavy then you might not have too much trouble. Kodak doesn't tell you which ports it wants open (other than all of them).FrameChannel setup is difficult at best. It requires some luck and magic. I did this 500 times but the frame would not pair. I finally got it to work, somehow, after many reboots of the frame, wall-punching, firewall tweaking, cursing, etc. The instructions are not clear to say the least. If the frame pops up a validation code then you know you are almost there. If I could retrace my steps of finally getting the frame paired with FrameChannel, I would explain it here, but I tried so many things over so many hours I'm going to chock it up to luck. Come to find out, the FrameChannel service has a bunch of ads it likes to show on your frame. I wouldn't bother with FrameChannel, save yourself the grief. I am a programmer and I work on enterprise networking software.I configure that stuff for a living.http://schlammatlas.de/en/node/21214 A Kodak frame should be a cake walk, right. Needless to say I wouldn't buy this for someone with limited computer experience if they wanted to use FrameChannel). The PC software that comes bundled with the frame will crash a lot. It will bring a modest laptop with decent computing power to its knees as it searches your harddrive for photos. It also doesn't tell you it is searching your hard drive for photos, and you may wonder why your PC slowed down so much right after you installed the software.It will happen over and over again. I had to turn off the uPnP AV server on my D-Link 323 NAS or the frame would keep freezing up.You can't do that really. You can upload a bunch of photos to the Frame, and use those as a slide show. You can configure multiple slideshows, but you can only watch one at a time, if you want a different slide show then you have to get up, walk to the frame, push the magic buttons, and select a different one. (You cannot change the shows from the Web UI, you actually can't do a whole lot from the web UI.) Now, walking to the frame isn't really a big deal, but come one.If you want to watch a photo feed from Flickr, then you have to walk up to the frame, select the flickr feed, then let it play. Granted, you can use FrameChannel to mix and match feeds and photos that you upload to FrameChannel, but you will get some ads, and you can't mix and match those with photos you uploaded directly to the frame. I already have a ton of photos servable from my home network. I don't want to upload them someplace else, so they can then be sent down from the internet back to the frame. Mix and match of photo streams is not easy with this frame. The web UI is limited as I said before. You can do some configuration, but you can't switch slide shows, etc. You need to do all that from the frame itself. You should be able to do everything from the frame and from the web UI. Scrolling through images or entering text on the frame is a major pain.https://artoftheark.com/images/canon-xl-h1-manual-pdf.pdf Using the bundled software is a bigger pain. If you are really tech saavy you can get it to do what you want. What I ended up doing was reconfigured my DNS-323 NAS as a web server, wrote some PHP scripts that generated RSS feeds for any photos that I or my wife throw into some folders (also on the NAS), then configured the frame for a single RSS feed, which points at my NAS. I don't have to upload any photos anyplace other than the NAS box, and I don't have to see ads from FrameChannel. So. I pretty much had to code up my own version of FrameChannel. Which was fun to be honest, but not how I planned to spend an evening. If you are not a programmer, and don't have a network backup box that is on all the time anyway that can serve up the photos.But, if you just want to copy some photos to the frame and that's it, or just use it for your Kodak Gallery pictures, then this is a great(but pricey) frame. 4 stars, 5 if it were cheaper. If you want to use all the bells and whistles. Get ready for some frustration. 2 stars. Maybe 3? No, not after the FrameChannel fiasco. 2 stars. I'm looking forward to some firmware updates to say the least:) Maybe they will fix some of the usability issues. Maybe not. Please try again later. From the United StatesPlease try again later. Please try again later. RWATL 5.0 out of 5 stars You can also set up some very neat Internet RSS feeds to show you weather forecasts and traffic updates. You can even set this thing up to turn itself on and off at specific times. We've got ours setup to come in the morning on work dayo show us the weather and traffic conditions. You'll need to setup a free account on Framechannel.com to access the RSS feeds and it takes a bit of manipulation to really figure out how to customize them to your hearts desire. It will also play music although the speakers are not exactly high fidelity, still you can do and it can access mp3 files from all 4 sources.The user interface on the frame is very easy to use.If you don't need the wireless features and just want to show show pictures. I'd probably not buy this. I would not give to say.That being said. we love this thing and it is the most innovative electronic gadget I've seen in quite some time. It is an absolutely cool device and is an amazing media viewer. THe frame is well constructed and well made. My kids already dropped it and it has survived thus far. The ac power cord is bit short if you intend to hang it on a wall, but works good enough for coffee tables. The user interface buttons on the frame disappear completely when you are not messing with them which. again. is just cool. Can you tell I highly recommend this. A definite cool present!Please try again later. Please try again later. Mathias H. Fruhwirth 5.0 out of 5 stars Frustrating at best.Please try again later. Please try again later. S. Greene 1.0 out of 5 stars It's a pretty case, the screen looks great, and the feature set is impressive. But the software and documentation problems are maddening. There is PC software that you install to control the frame and load photos, slideshows, etc. This software is frustratingly buggy and never worked for me. It gave several error messages on installation; after finally installing fully, it couldn't find the frame on the network. The screen displays an error message referring you to the manual, the manual refers you to a web FAQ, and the web site points you back to the manual - kind of an amusing tail-chasing exercise. After uninstalling and reinstalling, temporarily disabling my firewall, etc., I tried their live chat support, but the technician's script evidently extended only to the most basic things that I had already tried; and when I suggested that there might be a software problem he got argumentative. The frame did connect to the Internet and display my Kodak Gallery albums. So if that's all you want it for then I'd recommend it. But if you intend to use any of the advanced features, in particular controlling it wirelessly from a PC, it's a roll of the dice whether it will work for you. The one thing I would say from my experience with it is, if the software on the PC doesn't come up 100 clean and connect to the frame perfectly on your very first try, put the thing back in the box right away and give up, it's not worth hours of futzing with.Please try again later. Please try again later. Craig Petku 4.0 out of 5 stars My anticipated use for this frame is to place it in a public area then connect to a PC wirelessly to change slideshows and background music on the fly during parties. The weak points for this use case appear to be: 1) Setup of Wireless connectivity. My experience was better than most with the frame connecting to an unsecured network and then to a secured net after enabling WAP. However, manually adjusting the network parameters resulted in an inability to re-establish communications with the frame stating my security was wrong even though I verified it meticulously. The corrective action for this was to restore the frame to factory defaults (volume up and power) then re-enter the exact same data. 2) Slide transitions are much slower than the rate set in slide show options. This appears to be caused by the frame rescaling my images on the fly to fit them to the LCD. A faster processor would have been nice, but performance is usable setting the transition to the fastest rate. If you pre-load a slideshow to the frame and allow for resizing during the transfer it works better but this was not aligned with my use case. 3) Wireless speeds seem to be a little slow in transfering large amounts of data between the PC and the frame. Since this is not a multi-tasking user-interface device the frame (and PC Software) appears to be frozen during 10 minute updates. 4) Background audio breaks up when playing slideshows. This occurred with the audio and video files transferred wirelessly or pre-loaded on the frame. My initial assumption was the processor in the frame is just plain undersized or incompatible with my MP3 ripper. Attempts to correct this by re-ripping my audio tracks at a lower bit-rate were fruitless although I did notice that audio worked well while not in a slide show. What helped out enormously was changing the transition effects. While I occasionally hear a slight rhaspyness in a track, this may just be a limitation of the audio fidelity of the frame. 5) The PC Software for creating slide shows BLOWS CHUNKS. When accessing a directory on the frame it is unresponsive up while it downloads all of the information. This is excessive when you've downloaded 1000 images and just want to update a couple. It's also pretty sad to see the special edition of Easyshare SW for the frame doesn't even have a sort button for merging photos from several cameras by date. For that matter, the frame only plays in order of file name or picture date, making a scripted slide show more difficult to create. The slide show preview doesn't allow for deleting photo's from the show and the images in the picture tray are way too small to make judgement calls on. So it may sound like I'm down this frame, not really. As a bleading edge product it can be made to perform well and offer features this year that others will be adding next. The question you must ask yourself when considering this frame is are you willing to invest the time learning how to make it work and hope for firmware and PC software updates over the next few months to improve usability or would you rather wait another year for a more mature product from Kodak and others. If you aren't willing to spend a few hours frustrated wondering if problems are your media, network or the W1020, then save some money and drop the WIFI feature. If you really want to be the first in your group with a WIFI frame, then be aware that you can make this frame work pretty well if you invest the effort.Please try again later. Please try again later. GJM 2.0 out of 5 stars From a display perspective I found the image very good. Not supersharp, but colourful and contrasty, with enough detail to keep me happy and I'm a fussy photographer. The wireless feature worked OK for me, but my wireless router sat next to it on the bookshelf. It was a bit slow to navigate through the folders menu for remote computers, but I was able to access them. Seems to me I was not able to shuffle slideshows through the network, and the timing seemed to vary from what I had set in the menu, perhaps a result of erratic network speeds. Slide show options for internal or flash based images, seemed erratic too. Transitions seemed to vary from what I had selected, going into random mode on their own. The big issue for me was the inability to handle certain JPEG images. The frame would often hit an image it couldn't handle, hang, reboot, then return to the internal slide show. Later investigation on Amazon and Google suggests an issue with JPEGs saved as Progressive and indeed I found 15 such images in my collection. Unfortunately, I discovered this after returning the frame so am unable to verify if the frame works with the corrected images. I agree with everyone else that the supplied Easyshare Software is atrocious. Slow, slow, slow! I get the sense this is an unfinished product; rushed to the market before all the bugs were fixed. Again, it's a shame, because the image is quite delightful. I subsequently tried two more of these, both wireless and non-wireless. Again they would freeze after showing a few images, even though I had re-edited my folders to remove any progressive jpegs. I even plugged a flash drive into a store display and it hung after several images. I have used different flash drive and flash card combinations with the same results. The last frame I tried had a missing USB cable, and the protective plastic film had bubbles and wrinkles as if carelessly applied. I don't believe this was an open-box item since the adhesive seals were intact on the box flaps. If all you are doing is showing a few simple family pics this may well work fine for you, but as a serious tool for displaying images as art it just does not seem to work that well.Please try again later. Please try again later. Roshini Joseph 2.0 out of 5 stars However, if you have a say 3000 photographs stored on a remote disk and try to connect wirelessly, it works fine for an hour or so, then (possibly due to a momentary loss of connection), it goes back to displaying the same old 200 odd photographs from its frame. I then tried a 16GB USB card, but the software seemed buggy--it would someitimes load the photographs from the USB pretty quickly and then you would have a great time watching old photographs go by. But mostly, it would freeze on the USB and not load the photographs. It comes with other options such as news and other features, but in reality I didn't find them useful. Also, the propriatory tie in to the Kodak picture service was very irksome--If I paid for it, why can't I get my photographs from say Picassa. I got mine as a gift, but still found I was irked by the propriatory tie in to Kodak. I feel that they should give it as a freebie if it is tied in to their service. Lastly, the definition is low--forget about seeing your 10Mega Pixel photographs in crisp definition--you will see them a bit fuzzy. As I wrote earlier, I got it as a gift, and in its present state, would NOT buy it. IF the problems I describe above are fixed, then it would be a great thing to have.Please try again later. Please try again later. JMB CT 4.0 out of 5 stars I would recommend this with some caveats as noted below. Here are some tips: 1. Follow the install sequence precisely to get it set up correctly out of the box. Install the software first and completely before trying to connect the frame to the network. 2. The software is quirky and crashes. Use the repair function on the supplied CD after crashes to repair. While time consuming, this does get it working smoothly eventually. After it was fully set up, there have been no additional crashes. 3. If you have many pics and videos on your computer that you'd like to access via wifi, I'd recommend sticking to the pics only. To avoid some of the problems reported by others I'd recommend sorting your pics into folders by year (or some manageable size folders of 2-6 GB). I used photoshop select and copy the pics by year, copying them to an internal hard drive (C:) folder from an external (which seemed to help with wifi access, faster?). Then from the frame, access the pics by folder. This helps avoid the problem of crashes that occurs if you try to access all wifi pics at once. This is not an ideal solution since I had hoped to have the frame access all of my network pics without intervention, but it does work. Overall, the frame is a good value but do not expect perfection and plan on spending a couple of hours to get it working to your satisfaction.Please try again later. Please try again later. Amazon Customer 2.0 out of 5 stars The idea was that I would pull the images wirelessly from our server and display them. I could update the folder on the server and the pictures would show up on the frame. Reality is that the frame can not communicate with standard servers for file service. So, no sweat. Just use the special software and serve them from there. Hmm, when it powers up it forgets that you told it to pull from the remote PC and pulls the demo pictures from frame memory. I gave up so wireless was a complete bust. No use at all for pictures. Now, I put a digital card in a begin transferring pictures over. Oh my, it was incredibly slow on the transfers. After waiting through 20 or so pictures, I gave up again. I have a few thousand pictures and at this pace it would take weeks to get them on the frame. So, I buy a digital card, load them like normal and insert it in the digital frame. All seems well right up to the point where the frame seems to never finish reading the files from the card to get setup. I left it running and came back 3 hours later and it was still reading the card. I do have 11,000 pictures on that card but what did Kodak expect in today's world. From what I can see, the demo images look good. However, I will not recommend this frame to anyone. Its slow and the software seems wonky.Please try again later. Please try again later. Criminologist 4.0 out of 5 stars I see plenty of things that could use improvement, but in this case I think it's because any product that breaks new ground opens up a lot of possibilities. The 16:9 aspect ratio is wrong for a photo frame, and the resolution is a bit coarse when you look too closely, but it's good enough. I wish Kodak had included the ability to connect to Windows shared folders on my network, but there are several other ways to accomplish the goal of streaming photos to the frame. I wish that the FrameChannel feed supported slide transitions the way local slide shows do, but overall I'm impressed with it. It's maybe a bit overpriced considering that other frames are getting WiFi and touch borders now, but at least Kodak is showing some 2nd-gen improvement.Please try again later. Please try again later. This unique frame offers you a complete set of functions that will help make your photo display more than just a frame on the wall. With its Wi-Fi enabled capability, you can use the web to download images and music as well as sharing your photos with friends and family. The plug 'n play design is user-intuitive and will get you up and running in no time. Store thousands of images within the 512MB internal memory. The Quick Touch Border gives you instant access to all the menu functions with nothing more than a touch of your finger to the frame. You never touch the screen. The frame plays video and will also accept your MP3 music selections. Two card slots assure you of a constant supply of pictures. In addition, this frame gives you the complete freedom to select, choose and edit your images which you can project as either individual shots or a complete slideshow. And, with the addition of music from your MP3 player, the show takes on an additional dimension. It's a plug 'n play design which means all you have to do is insert your memory card and you're ready to go. Kodak EasyShare Software permits simple sharing of web images with family and friends. The drag and drop design couldn't be any easier. The frame comes with two faceplates so you can stylize your frame to whatever room or environment you are in.Let us know YOUR RECENTLY VIEWED ITEMS Browsing History ON Clear History Not responsible for typographical or illustrative errors. Even photos with large file sizes load quickly, and menus open and close with limited lag. This is a zippy frame. Once you connect to your Wi-Fi network (you input any security keys through a virtual keyboard) and install the Kodak EasyShare desktop software on your Windows PC, you can wirelessly transfer photos from your computer to the frame. You can also access photos you've stored on your online Kodak Gallery account, as well as access friends' albums that are linked to your account. You can also tap into Flickr and FrameChannel and subscribe to Photo RSS feeds. FrameChannel also provides RSS feeds for news, weather, and sports scores. Mac users can't transfer photos from their PCs to the frame wirelessly, but they can take advantage of all the online services. The interface isn't quite Apple-like, but it is pretty easy to use. No major complaints there.However, the frame will not display video from Flip Video cameras. For example, despite setting the entire slide show transition to Fade or Wipe, the frame continued to randomly mix in other transitions. Furthermore, when we tried to delete the current movie, it displayed the name of the previous image, and we had to delete the image in order to get the movie name to display. At 800x480, the image may not be razor sharp and you'll see some slight stair-stepping on curved edges and diagonal lines, like on leaves. The colors look pretty natural, and though blacks may not be terribly deep, there's enough dynamic range in the midtones to render sufficient detail in shadows. While the sound quality from the tinny internal speakers isn't great--you can play MP3 files as background music for your slide shows--it's passable. If you want to save a little dough, you can step down to the smaller W820, but for a lot of people, the extra real-estate of the Kodak EasyShare W1020's screen will be worth the extra cost. Let's round up some of its best movies. Let's round up Amazon's best gems. Here are some of the best Hulu has to offer. We delete comments that violate our policy, which we encourage you to read. Discussion threads can be closed at any time at our discretion. To use the touch border,Setting up the stand; attaching the power cable. Your frame is set up to display pictures in landscapeStand (pull out to adjust the frame angle). Your power cable may lookTurning on your frame. Power button- press and hold for 2 seconds, then release.Using your frame’s Quick Touch Borders. Tap lights next toTouch tips. Tap and slide on the Quick. Tap a border toTap (Close) toTap the lightSlide to highlightTap OK to selectDon’t hover,Home. Play slide showClose. Tap lightsSlide onBorders. Slide to scroll. Scroll through images—Like turning the pages of a book, slide left to go back. ForTapConnecting to your wireless network. After you set your language, your frame scans for available wireless networks. See. Connecting to your wireless network, page 7. Enjoying your pictures immediately! To view your pictures or play a slide show,USB device (see page 6). Your pictures playIf your frame has preloaded sample pictures, theyInserting a memory cardSecure Digital. MultiMedia Card. Memory StickCompactFlashMicroDrive. Connecting a digital camera or other USB device. USB cable includedUSB devices: camera, flash drive, cardIf you have problems with your wireless setup or connection, see. Troubleshooting starting on page 22. Or open EasyShare digital display software on. Follow the automatedConnecting to your wireless network. To allow your frame to access the contents of your computer wirelessly, connect yourNOTE: If you are not sure you have a wireless network, ask the person who set up your computer.The Scanning for available wireless networks.Available wireless networks are listed.Or, to select another network, slide orTap Back to dismiss the screen and connect later. Later—To connect later, tap HomeIf your wireless network is not found, select Scan again. You may need to enter theThe person who setOr, tap Help me connect forThe Connecting. screen appears. Or, select Exit without connecting and go to the Home screen (page 14). Enter security key (if you have security enabled). If you have wireless network security enabled, enter your security key (WEP or WPA)Slide along the bottom of the touch border to highlightIf you do not have security enabled, go to step 1. NOTE: The screen identifies your security as either WEP or WPA. A WEP security key can be either:A WPA key is 8-63 characters, case sensitive. The person who set up your network can provide you with this information. Congratulations! You have successfully connected to your network. Return to thisInstalling the software.