The Mac Observer

Skip navigational links

You're viewing an article in TMO's historic archive vault. Here, we've preserved the comments and how the site looked along with the article. Use this link to view the article on our current site:
PhotoVu Launches 17" Wall-Mounted Digital Picture Frame

PhotoVu Launches 17" Wall-Mounted Digital Picture Frame

by , 8:15 AM EST, February 16th, 2005

PhotoVu, LLC announced Wednesdaythe availability of its new PhotoVu PV1740 picture frame, with a 17-inch display and 40 gigabyte removable hard drive.

The PV1740 is a smaller version to the 19-inch version. "Many potential customers have asked us for a more cost effective complement to our current product offering and in response we've developed the PV1740," said Robert Jordan, Partner, PhotoVu.

The 17-inch model includes a custom frame and mat made to order and built-in support for Adobe Photoshop Album 2.0 and Apple's iPhoto.

All PhotoVu digital picture frames require no additional image manipulation or software installation. Consumer and business users can display thousands of digital photos or other digital content stored on any computer that has a network connection and is running Windows, Mac OS, Linux, or a UNIX based operating system. All features and operations are controlled remotely from any computer's web browser on the network.

The PhotoVu PV1740 retails for US$899.

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:Guest
Subject: Cool! But...

$899! That's one expensive picture frame.
If it is networked, why not lose the HD and all the smarts, just have enough memory for a few pictures (for a slideshow) and have a server (your mac with iPhoto, for example) do the heavy lifting. If it were closer to $200, I would consider getting one.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Ands another thing...

It really needs to support camera RAW formats.
The people that are going to buy a $900 picture frame are also going to have a camera that shoots RAW...

Close Name:B-sabre Posts: 70 Joined: 18 Jan 2005
Subject:

For that price, you could buy a good 17" LCD monitor and a Mac Mini and have the same functionality, plus a computer....

Hmmm, maybe I'm on to something.

1) Buy a 17" LCD monitor and take off the stand.

2) Velcro Mac Mini (with Airport and/or Bluetooth) to back of monitor

3) Encase all the above in a shadow-box style frame. Running the power cords from Mini and the monitor might be a pain, but its doable.

Voila'! LCD art frame with a ton of smarts! Run the Mac Mini with either a bluetooth mouse and keyboard or via VNC and use it to run iPhoto... and iTunes as your house music server... and an X10 controller like SmartHouse to be a house controller...

Or you could skip step 3 and just hide the Mini somewhere out of sight and put a nice faux frame around the monitor, running an iPhoto screen saver.

Close Name:Small White Car Posts: 1960 Joined: 02 Jul 2004
Subject: Re: Ands another thing...

Quote
Anonymous wrote:
It really needs to support camera RAW formats.
The people that are going to buy a $900 picture frame are also going to have a camera that shoots RAW...


Well then you're just wasting hard drive space.

I like to run my photos as a screen saver but I've found that looking at the original files, which are only 1 or 2 MB JPEGs in my case, taxes the system to the point where the screen saver sometimes refuses to work. The problem is that I have thousands of photos, I think, and it tries to keep track of all of them, or something.

Anyway, I run my newest photos through a Photoshop action that copies them all to 640x480 JPEGs at medium quality. The "copy" folder ends up being a few MBs instead of the Gigabytes that the actual photos are, and my screen saver can display them with no problem. They look just fine, too. There's no reason I need to look at a photo that has several times more pixels in it then my screen can display. In my case, I'm blowing up the pictures to view them now, and it looks fine.

I realize that this is not the most convinient thing in the world, which brings me to my point. This frame should come with software that you load on your computer which will look at all the photos you tell it to see, and it will automaticly make small versions of them which you can burn to CD or transfer over a network or whatever. It makes it a much easier thing to take ALL your photos somewhere.

The point is, all of these different "display" technologies need to follow the lead of the iPod Photo. It saves small versions of your photos that are made to be viewed on television screens. If it all happens automaticly, you don't even notice it and you gain a ton of more hard drive space when you're doing it. Yeah, I want my full-sized images saved for printing out, but other then that, I don't need several-MB-large files going over my network just to use as a screen saver. The iPods got it right, hopefully these other companies can follow their lead.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: PhotoVu PV1740

PhotoVu LLC here:

Thank you for the disussion.

The power of our solution is that you DO NOT need to make/maintain a separate low resolution copy of each picture in your photo database. We read directly from your iPhoto database, and scale and crop to the 1280*1024 display in real time. Simply manage all your photos, in their native resolution, in one location with iPhoto and your Mac, then we do the rest -- playing any album, smart album, your whole Photo Libray, etc., that you choose. That includes all the "heavy lifting" with our built-in computer inside the frame.

All this results in practically zero load on your computer's cpu so it doesn't get bogged down, no separate photos to keep track of on the frame, and no velcro! Different approaches for different folks, but my wife doesn't want a computer hanging off her living room wall and either do a lot of our very happy customers.

Close Name:Small White Car Posts: 1960 Joined: 02 Jul 2004
Subject:

^^

Thanks for the feedback. I agree that your solution is ideal, in my case the Apple screensaver CAN'T manage to do that.

If this actually does it then I agree that it's the way to go.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Digital Multimedia Player More Affordable

Digital Multimedia Player More Affordable
Sun Group responded to consumer demand for affordable high quality Digital Photo Frame. The company has recently announced the introduction of their new line of Digital Photo Frame and Digital Multimedia Frame at new low prices that will get every one up and running. They’re going to be selling their SUN-SG8 Digital Photo Frames at unbelievable prices. When it comes to Digital Photo Frames. The products are known as one of the best on the market making them a must have for a price this low.
Read Letsgodigital Review
http://www.letsgodigital.org/html/review/photo_frame/sun_sg8.html
www.sungroupshop.com

Comment on this Article


You cannot edit your comments.   You cannot delete your comments.

Comments are currently closed. Please email the author instead.


Recent Headlines - Updated November 22nd

Fri, 7:07 PM
Games - Soccer Sim Championship Manager 2010 Released for Mac
6:47 PM
Games - EA Publishes Original Monopoly for iPhone
6:15 PM
News - Original Apple I on Ebay for $50K, w/Letter from Steve Jobs
6:11 PM
Games - New iPhone Games: Secret of the Lost Cavern Ep 1, New DJ Nights, More
5:47 PM
Games - Star Trek D-A-C Game Headed to the Mac Next Month
4:57 PM
Product News - TidBITS Releases “Take Control of Syncing Data in Snow Leopard”
4:26 PM
John Martellaro's Blog - Particle Debris (week ending 11/20) Stationery Pads Go Poof
2:59 PM
Free on iTunes - Musée du Louvre, Art Lite, SketchBook Mobile X and More.
1:50 PM
Deal Brothers - Acer P215H bmid 21.5” Widescreen LCD Monitor:  $139.99
11:24 AM
TMO Appearances - Jeff Gamet Shares More Holiday Gift Ideas on MacJury
10:43 AM
Product News - Cocktail 4.5 for Leopard Adds QuickLook Cache Clearing
10:06 AM
News - Hack Enables Mac OS X 10.6.2 on Netbooks

The Mac Observer Reader Specials

  • __________
  • Buy Stuff, Support TMO!
  • Podcast: Mac Geek Gab
  • Podcast: Apple Weekly Report
  • TMO on Twitter!