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IPEVO shows off a what a high-end digital photo frame should look like

IPEVO shows off a what a high-end digital photo frame should look like

IPEVO is one of those Taiwanese companies that doesn’t get a lot of attention. It’s been making Skype phones and other gear for a while, and now it’s showing off its first digital photo frame, the Kaleido R7. Yeah, been there, done that. There are a bunch of connected digital photo frames at the International Consumer Electronics Show. But the company is shooting for a high-end product and it looks pretty good.

When you look at this one, you have to ask if these things are more like fashion or works of art than technology.

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You can stream photos into the frame, which holds about 512 megabytes of data, or enough for 10,000 photos. You can plug in all sorts of content: a mini USB (universal serial bus) cable, USB or an SD flash memory card. You can stream as many as 500 photos at a time into the frame from sites like Flickr. Since it’s Wi-Fi connected, you pretty much have unlimited storage. Photos will appear and rotate automatically, like a slide show with no end.

This 7-inch frame isn’t met to hang on a wall. It’s really for your office table, giving you a new display to glance at while you’re watching your TV. It has a 16:9 widescreen display but works only with photos. It doesn’t do audio or video and is thus minimalist in its approach.

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You can rotate it for vertical or horizontal views, and the pictures automatically resize to fit the screen. It goes on sale online on the company’s web site on March 1 and will cost $199. The company is working on an iPhone application for it. It works for Macs or PCs. You can control the frame from a PC, a remote control or a bunch of buttons that are barely visible on the stand of the frame.

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