Product Details
Kodak EasyShare SV-811 8-inch Digital Picture Frame

Kodak EasyShare SV-811 8-inch Digital Picture Frame
From Kodak

Price: $219.00

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by Wall Street Photo

22 new or used available from $48.49

Average customer review:

Product Description

Start viewing your pictures and videos right away on the crisp, clear 8-inch LCD screen. On-frame viewing and editing features make it simple to look at and edit your favorite pictures, while the built-in speakers allow you to enjoy MP3s.


Product Details

  • Brand: Kodak
  • Model: SV-811
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 5.02" h x 1.38" w x 3.84" l, 7.05 pounds
  • Display size: 8

Features

  • 8-inch viewable LCD display
  • Play back videos and MP3s; built-in speakers
  • On-screen viewing and editing features
  • 128 MB internal memory; compatible with SD, MMC, Memory Stick, xD, CF and MD cards
  • Convenient remote control included

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
From the Manufacturer

The New Way to Frame Your Pictures

Kodak EasyShare SV811 8-inch Digital Picture Frame
Smart, intuitive multimedia -- done your way

  • Start viewing your pictures and videos right away -- just insert a memory card or connect your digital camera and enjoy
  • A frame full of features: Control how you display slide shows and view thumbnails; Additionally, copy, delete, and print images
  • Set the mood with music -- listen to your favorite MP3s with built-in speakers
  • Selectable viewing hours -- featuring automatic on/off settings
Simple to use
  • Be in charge with the handy remote control
  • Fill it up with memories thanks to 128 MB of internal memory
  • The convenient drag-and-drop feature makes transferring pictures a snap
  • Connect to a PictBridge-enabled printer to print pictures without a computer
Viewing excellence
  • Optimized with KODAK Light Management Film to provide a bright, clear display with excellent viewing angle
  • View your pictures on the 8-inch (20.3 cm), 16:9 wide screen featuring KODAK Color Science for vibrant color and crisp detail
Accessorize your pictures
  • Display your frame on a tabletop or on a wall -- vertically or horizontally
  • Add style to any décor with accessory faceplates (optional)
Kodak EasyShare SV811 8-inch Digital Picture Frame
In the Box
  • Kodak EasyShare SV811 Digital Picture Frame
  • Remote control
  • AC power cord
  • USB cable
  • Software CD
  • Getting Started Guide
System Requirements
  • Windows Macintosh Hardware
  • Windows XP or higher
  • Internet Explorer 6.0 or higher
  • 600 MHz processor or greater
  • Macintosh OS X 10.3 or higher; Power Mac/Power Book G3, G4, G5; iMac; eMac; iBook; MacBookPro
  • Safari 1.1 or higher
  • 128 MB RAM (256 MB recommended)
  • CD-ROM drive
  • Available USB port


Customer Reviews

**Updated - still a great digital frame...with some hiccups3
***Updated 9/27/08 - I still really like this digital frame - I purchased 5 and all 5 are still kicking with daily use. I use the auto on-off program feature which is so nice. It still won't accept the mini flash drives and there are still ocassional hiccups with edited pictures. Honestly, I don't expect this to last much past another couple of years. Still, I like it and I'm waiting for Kodak to come out with a 15" frame. I've looked at almost all the others and just don't like the quality - not worth the price yet until Kodak enters this market.

I really like this ditigal frame and I actually bought 5 - 3 are going to be christmas gifts. 2 major warnings: 1) don't even think of loading the software that comes with the frame - you don't need it in any way. Just plug in a flash drive stick or SD card and it automatically works. Just plug into your computer with synch cord and let Windows recognize it and do all the work, and then add pics on to the jump drive from your computer. 2) Mini flash drives do NOT work on this frame! Only full-size flash drives. From what I read on message boards, it has to do with if you are using edited and cropped .jpeg files, which I do use. In any case, the only way around this so far that I've found is to use a full-size flash drive, NOT a mini drive. The problem is the full-size drive protrudes out from the edge of the frame and is visible. Not very cool. I haven't tried the SD card yet and that would be invisible but not nearly as easily synchable with any computer since you would have to have a card reader. With a flash drive, I can add or change pics from any computer. I don't have that capability with an SD card.

I know it's strange, but I still really like the quality of the picture and the size of this frame for the low price even tho you can't use a mini flash drive. This is just my 2 cents worth.

I had absolutely no trouble at all buying from Amazon and from Ace Digital Photo. Package arrived as described and it came very very fast for just the regular, standard shipping.

Critical Flaw - No Random Slide Show1
I picked up this picture frame as a gift for my wife, thinking that the name (Kodak) would get me a better quality frame than some of the unknown brands out there. Well, I was partially right... the display is gorgeous, the frame seems well-built, and the feature set is rich. My initial assessment was strong enough to give the frame 4 stars.

However, after using the frame for less than an hour, I believe that this device has one fatal flaw that ruins it. There is no way to have the frame pick pictures randomly to display in the slide show. There is no shuffle play! This means that every time you start it up, you see the exact same pictures in the exact same order as last time.

The "Getting Started" guide sums it up this way: "The pictures and videos - on the card or device you inserted - are displayed in the order they're stored on the card or device." IMHO, when you've got hundreds of pictures on an SD card, you'd like to see a variety, a sampling of what you've got, not the same ones in the same order every time. To me, this is such a basic feature that I didn't even think to look for it. That's my mistake, to be sure, but I hope that others can learn from my mistake.

BTW, I played around with different ways to change the order, including changing the last modified dates of the files, the names of the files, the creation dates of the files, and the last accessed dates of the files, but to no avail. I'd take the SD card, put it in my computer, tweak the files, then put the card back in the frame, only to see the exact same pictures in the exact same order as before I changed anything. Very frustrating, and very disappointing.

Until Kodak fixes this problem with a firmware upgrade, there is no way I could recommend that anyone buy this frame. I'm still searching for a good one.

Do NOT use EasyShare Software4
As others mentioned, the documentation for the picture frame is horrible. Thus, I decided to hook the frame to my MacBook Pro using the supplied USB cable and transfer images. For some reason I could not eject the disk image after transferring the images from my computer to the frame and when I disconnected the USB cord it seemed to corrupt several of the images which in turn caused the frame to malfunction when it encountered the first corrupt image. Fortunately turning the power off and then on corrected the malfunction.

I then deleted all of the images from the frame's memory, and decided that I would try loading the EasyShare software onto my computer to see if that would facilitate the transfer. BIG MISTAKE!! DO NOT USE THE SOFTWARE. Here's what happened... After loading the software and then launching it, it asks to import your images and it tells you that it will not change any of your images. IT LIED. The software ended up corrupting about 100 of my favorite images that I had enhanced using Aperture and I've spent the better part of the morning recoving the files from a backup and then reapplying the enhancements to each image.

After that debacle, I was about to pitch the frame, but I decided to try one more thing. I used the computer to transfer all of the images to a USB thumb drive and then plugged the thumb drive into the frame. This worked like a charm and resulted in gorgeous images being displayed on the frame. The frame allows you to copy images from your thumb drive to the frame which is what I ultimately did so I could use the thumb drive for other tasks.

Other than not using the included software, my other recommendation to purchasers of the frame would be to export the images that you want to put on the frame from your image processing application using a resolution of 800x480 pixels. This way you will maximize the number of images that the frame's memory will hold.