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The new Memorex player is outstanding as a
standard DVD player, but it's the still-picture display
that has me excited.
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technofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and
commentaries, continuously available online since
1983
T e c h n o f i l e
Newest DVD players can show your camera's still
pictures on your TV
April 6, 2003
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, The Post-Standard
What's the best way to show your
digital images to your friends and family? Forget making
prints from your money-eating inkjet. Use your TV
instead.
There's an easy way to do this and a
hard way. The hard way, which I wrote about last December,
is to make a DVD that contains a slideshow of your images.
But this is far from cheap -- DVD burners and blank,
recordable DVD disks cost about five times what equivalent
CD burners and disks cost. And editing a DVD to make a
photo slideshow sometimes takes a lot of time.
The easy way? Burn your images to a CD
and pop it into your DVD player. There's a catch, of
course. You have to own a DVD player that can show still
pictures.
But this isn't an expensive
proposition. My wife and I grabbed a Memorex MVD2028 DVD
player at a local store last month when we saw the price
(about $80) and the specs. The sign over a pile of Memorex
boxes said the player was able to play DVDs, video CDs, MP3
CDs and "Kodak Picture CDs" -- a euphemism of a
sort for any CDs that have JPEG images on them.
My life as an avid digital photographer
changed that day. I could not be happier. The new Memorex
player is outstanding as a standard DVD player -- it has
component video outputs as well as normal video connections
and an S-Video jack, and even has a switchable
progressive-scan function that provides superbly stable
video for high-end TVs -- and it performs very well as an
audio CD player and MP3 player. It can even provide 3D
sound from movie sound tracks.
But it's the still-picture display
that has me excited. Other players probably have the same
capability (they tend to be made in the same factories,
with the same innards), but the MVD2028 is the first
JPEG-capable DVD player I've tried, and I'm a fan
for life.
Here's why. I'm already in the
habit of storing my digital pictures on CDs. To show them,
I simply play the CDs.
When you put a CD full of JPEG images
into the player, the Memorex MVD2028 figures out in a
second or two that the disk isn't a DVD or audio CD and
switches itself into still-picture mode. If the pictures
are in the main directory of the CD (if they're not in
folders), the player shows you the file list on the TV
screen. If the images are in folders, you'll see the
folders; clicking a button on the remote control when a
folder is highlighted opens the folder to show the
contents.
You can show all the pictures or just
the ones you want to see. Each one is shown for a couple of
seconds, fading into the next picture smoothly.
The player had no problem with
normal-size photos, the kind that most digital cameras take
(in the 1- to 3-megapixel range). Even the photos from my
5-megapixel camera displayed quickly. When I played a CD
containing very large scans -- 60-megabyte scans of slides
taken in Paris and 270-megabyte scans of war images I took
in Vietnam -- the player took a noticeable time decoding
the photos between images in the slideshow. (JPEG photos
are encoded and must be decoded to be viewed.) I didn't
find the delay a problem.
I was able to put the player into
"Pause" on individual images. The timing of the
slide show can't be adjusted otherwise.
On both our "normal" TV and
our large-screen set, images looked much better than I
expected. TVs are not as sharp and detailed as computer
screens, yet my photos were bright and richly detailed.
Maybe I'm being fooled a little by my own prejudice --
after all, I was looking at my own photos, and I'm
proud of them -- but I suspect my Congregationalist
upbringing has a counterbalancing effect on such pride.
Because Memorex insists on referring to
"Kodak Picture CD" instead of plain old JPEG
images on a CD, I checked playback with one of the Picture
CDs I had on hand. It did fine. (Picture CDs contain JPEGs
in their own folder.) I also tried, without luck, to get
the player to show images in other formats. Only JPEGs
worked.
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