Thanks, that was a good amount of info for one video - I have this exact frame and I'm busy getting (thousands of) pictures ready to load on it. I would have liked some tips on how to organize the pictures in the frame's memory (e.g. in different folders according to vacation destination) and how to set the frame to display just a certain folder or if possible a certain group of folders in a specific sequence if that is possible. I plan to start every folder name with the date formatted in YYMMDD followed by a short description such as "Tromso Norway" so they will store in chronological order in case my only display option is by folder name. Maybe you can do another video on that subject (I'm sure that I will figure it out as I go, but the experience of others in advance is invaluable).
I haven't tackled that subject yet but as a Photographer I organize my photos by year and subjects inside the year folders which as worked well over the year. Also you might want peruse this video which explains one of the key features of the Fullja frame: ua-cam.com/video/jTYZL7REHLw/v-deo.html Many thanks for connecting in. Paul
Hello, I have the 10 inch model already with a couple thousand pictures on it. I want to upgrade to a bigger frame😊can the pictures that I have on my 10’’ frame just be transferred to the new one I’m gonna order or am I gonna have to just pick them all over again to put them on the new one? Thanks for your time 😊
I have no idea how to figure this thing out. I'm about ready to send it back to Amazon because it doesn't do anything what I try. It doesn't even have sound
The problem with Fullja is that there's no way to start the slideshow! It used to just start on its own after awhile, but since updating the software, it won't start. It just stays on the home screen, or whatever screen I navigate to, and nothing happens. Nothing in the manual about how to trigger the slideshow either. The Slideshow setting is set to one minute, yet nothing happens after one minute. Emailed support, waiting to hear back.
A picture must be cropped and sized to fit the entire frame - "newer" cell phones (and other cameras) can take quite large pictures, but sometimes cell phones will default to sending a scaled down version via email or texting to reduce data amounts and costs. Cell phones will send the full size picture if set accordingly. Also the shape of this picture frame or a computer monitor or a smart TV or a cell phone screen may or may not be the same shape as the default shape of the picture produced by the camera (not all cameras are the same and more expensive cameras will allow changing the picture shape taken by the camera (i.e. square, rectangle, "cinema" - this frame is "cinema shape" - very wide compared to its height and not the shape of "standard" printed photos such as 4x6, 5x7, or 8x10)). So this frame is "cinema" shape - 16x9 - no units of measure, 16x9 is a width vs height shape and would be more correctly written as 16:9 (the screen at a movie theatre is also 16:9 shape, but much larger than this frame of course). Photo editing software (even basic editing software apps that may be on your phone) can crop a picture to that shape, but in some cases that may "cut off heads" or other details if the original picture is tightly zoomed in and a different shape (for example a 5x7 shape - no units of measure, just a shape ratio). If the original picture is not already that 16x9 shape and does not lend itself to be cropped to that 16x9 shape, then it will still display, but even if the picture size is large enough to fill the full vertical height of the frame, it will not be wide enough to fill the full width. Ideally the picture file size will be big enough (commonly called "picture resolution" although that is not quite technically complete information) to contain enough pixels to fill at least the vertical height of the frame, which needs to be 1080 pixels high and if it is to fill the full width of the frame the picture must be 1920 pixels wide (assuming landscape layout). To recap - 16x9, which would be more correctly written 16:9 is simply a shape (1x1 or 1:1 would be square); 1080 pixels and 1920 pixels are sizes i.e. dimensions whose unit of measure is pixels NOT inches or centimeters. Display screen dimensions are best described in pixels, but most people visualize in inches or centimeters so marketing uses those dimensions. Cropping in a photo editing software chops the picture to a desired shape. Resizing in the software sizes the shape to a specific dimension preferably measured in number of pixels to be sure the picture is ideal for the frame - otherwise it may not fill the full screen. Sorry for the long and somewhat technical lecture - I hope it makes sense after a couple of re-reads! P.S. if your camera does not take pictures in that 16:9 shape then don't zoom in on your subject too tightly so that you have excess height and width to allow cropping the picture to the 16:9 shape without ruining the picture (otherwise just accept that the picture won't fill both height and width of the frame)
Mine is smaller. How can people send me pictures? Do they email pictures right to the frame? I know the frame has its own email so I'm assuming they just send the pictures to the frame. Then the frame will notify you when there's more pictures added
Thanks, that was a good amount of info for one video - I have this exact frame and I'm busy getting (thousands of) pictures ready to load on it. I would have liked some tips on how to organize the pictures in the frame's memory (e.g. in different folders according to vacation destination) and how to set the frame to display just a certain folder or if possible a certain group of folders in a specific sequence if that is possible. I plan to start every folder name with the date formatted in YYMMDD followed by a short description such as "Tromso Norway" so they will store in chronological order in case my only display option is by folder name. Maybe you can do another video on that subject (I'm sure that I will figure it out as I go, but the experience of others in advance is invaluable).
I haven't tackled that subject yet but as a Photographer I organize my photos by year and subjects inside the year folders which as worked well over the year. Also you might want peruse this video which explains one of the key features of the Fullja frame: ua-cam.com/video/jTYZL7REHLw/v-deo.html Many thanks for connecting in. Paul
Is there a motion sensor on the frame? Is so after how long would the frame turn off?
Can you install any apps on it? UA-cam? Facebook?
Not that I'm aware.
Can photos be sent to this frame by other collaborators? (Trying to find a big photo frame for my grandmother that we all can send pics to)
Yes, for sure.
Hello, I have the 10 inch model already with a couple thousand pictures on it. I want to upgrade to a bigger frame😊can the pictures that I have on my 10’’ frame just be transferred to the new one I’m gonna order or am I gonna have to just pick them all over again to put them on the new one? Thanks for your time 😊
I have no idea how to figure this thing out. I'm about ready to send it back to Amazon because it doesn't do anything what I try. It doesn't even have sound
How much power does it use?
Does it support .CR3 photos
can it be hooked up to a hdmi and used as a display or a secondary monitor ?
there's no provision for that. No hdmi ports. Cheers
How does the music setting work? Can you add music to it?
Is so can it plays as background while photos are playing?
Yes, thru the app or usb.
The problem with Fullja is that there's no way to start the slideshow! It used to just start on its own after awhile, but since updating the software, it won't start. It just stays on the home screen, or whatever screen I navigate to, and nothing happens. Nothing in the manual about how to trigger the slideshow either. The Slideshow setting is set to one minute, yet nothing happens after one minute. Emailed support, waiting to hear back.
Did you hear back?
Is this still ongoing? Still not working?
(I cliked the link) It's not avaliable anymore atm...
How to turn of Weather/time display?
Can you put posters in it?
Huh?
@@nickelsworth7097 Can you download posters and post them on the frame?
How come some pictures don’t fit in the entire frame?
A picture must be cropped and sized to fit the entire frame - "newer" cell phones (and other cameras) can take quite large pictures, but sometimes cell phones will default to sending a scaled down version via email or texting to reduce data amounts and costs. Cell phones will send the full size picture if set accordingly. Also the shape of this picture frame or a computer monitor or a smart TV or a cell phone screen may or may not be the same shape as the default shape of the picture produced by the camera (not all cameras are the same and more expensive cameras will allow changing the picture shape taken by the camera (i.e. square, rectangle, "cinema" - this frame is "cinema shape" - very wide compared to its height and not the shape of "standard" printed photos such as 4x6, 5x7, or 8x10)). So this frame is "cinema" shape - 16x9 - no units of measure, 16x9 is a width vs height shape and would be more correctly written as 16:9 (the screen at a movie theatre is also 16:9 shape, but much larger than this frame of course).
Photo editing software (even basic editing software apps that may be on your phone) can crop a picture to that shape, but in some cases that may "cut off heads" or other details if the original picture is tightly zoomed in and a different shape (for example a 5x7 shape - no units of measure, just a shape ratio). If the original picture is not already that 16x9 shape and does not lend itself to be cropped to that 16x9 shape, then it will still display, but even if the picture size is large enough to fill the full vertical height of the frame, it will not be wide enough to fill the full width. Ideally the picture file size will be big enough (commonly called "picture resolution" although that is not quite technically complete information) to contain enough pixels to fill at least the vertical height of the frame, which needs to be 1080 pixels high and if it is to fill the full width of the frame the picture must be 1920 pixels wide (assuming landscape layout).
To recap - 16x9, which would be more correctly written 16:9 is simply a shape (1x1 or 1:1 would be square); 1080 pixels and 1920 pixels are sizes i.e. dimensions whose unit of measure is pixels NOT inches or centimeters. Display screen dimensions are best described in pixels, but most people visualize in inches or centimeters so marketing uses those dimensions. Cropping in a photo editing software chops the picture to a desired shape. Resizing in the software sizes the shape to a specific dimension preferably measured in number of pixels to be sure the picture is ideal for the frame - otherwise it may not fill the full screen.
Sorry for the long and somewhat technical lecture - I hope it makes sense after a couple of re-reads!
P.S. if your camera does not take pictures in that 16:9 shape then don't zoom in on your subject too tightly so that you have excess height and width to allow cropping the picture to the 16:9 shape without ruining the picture (otherwise just accept that the picture won't fill both height and width of the frame)
It won't read the TF card
I have one and it does none of these things I can't figure it out.
Is it the same model as mine?
Mine is smaller. How can people send me pictures? Do they email pictures right to the frame? I know the frame has its own email so I'm assuming they just send the pictures to the frame. Then the frame will notify you when there's more pictures added
check out my video on how to upload to a digital picture frame here: ua-cam.com/video/jTYZL7REHLw/v-deo.html It's fairly easy to do. Paul