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Tag: nixplay

How to Tell Your Story with a Photo Playlist

Music playlists are everywhere. But what about photo playlists? Not sure what I’m talking about? Great! This is really how you can put your digital photos to work. And it involves using digital photo frames…

I’m a fan of digital photo frames for how they unlock the countless pictures you’d otherwise not be sharing with your family and friends. Sure, you can post your pics to Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and online family photo folders, but those are one-offs, individual images that describe a moment in your life. And you’ve got to hope that nobody misses any of your photos as they fly through their social feeds.

That’s not at all the same as a larger grouping of photos you can control on a digital photo frame that you’ve given out. These always-available images rotate through to tell a larger and every-changing story about your family and its ongoing adventures.

And if you think that digital photo frames are a pain to update, you’re behind the times. Many models can pull their pics from the cloud via WiFi, and you can update your displayed images anytime from any location in the world.

The Photo Playlist of Your Life
But I think the opportunity to maintain an ever-changing photographic ‘playlist’ is the big “aha moment” that lots of folks still haven’t discovered. Do you want to rotate through photos from your past vacation? Maybe your last few weeks of weekend fun? How about some family archival photos? It’s all as easy as a few clicks away…

Whatever the topic, photo playlists give you the opportunity to display a much richer story.

Everyone makes photo books, right? But these books often just sit on a shelf. Why not use those same images to add to your life’s photo playlist that’s always rotating through on a digital photo frame?
(If you’re twitching about the idea of ‘always,’ don’t worry… These frames have sleep modes.)

Loving Nixplay’s Dynamic Playlist Feature
I’ve been using Nixplay digital photo frames for the past few years. Originally, I uploaded my pics to Nixplay’s cloud and then synced the photos to my frames from there. Truthfully, it was a bit cumbersome. So, when Nixplay began linking to cloud services like Instagram, Flickr and Dropbox, that was the upgrade that made moving my photo files to my Nixplay frames almost effortless.

Here’s why…

I simply created a Dropbox photo folder on my iMac’s desktop. I linked that folder to my Nixplay online account and digital frame. Then, I simply drop my photo files into the folder to add to the frame’s playlist.

Just as importantly, I regularly delete older photos in the folder to keep the frame’s content fresh. This is how I maintain my “dynamic playlist.”
(You can have as many playlists or dynamic playlists as you want.)

I know I’ve said this before, but you absolutely don’t want to keep older pictures hanging around when you’ve got fresh content to share. There will be exceptions, but I find this rule generally holds.

How Illuminating is Skylight?
If you’re in the market to pick up one of these visual portals to your recent past, congratulations! Is Nixplay the only choice out there? Not at all…

In fact, a friend asked me the other day about digital photo frames made by Skylight. I did some research, and here’s what I found…

Skylight’s big trick is you can upload photos its frames it via email. No cloud storage. And no extra steps to slow you down. Operationally, viewers manage all of the photos locally on the frame and delete them when they want.

That may sound easy, but consider this… If you give out Skylight frames to relatives, you can’t manage the photo playlist from your own computer once you email the pics out.

For me, that’s a deal breaker.
(I need more control.)

That said, Skylight’s one really cool feature is its touch screen. Your viewers can swipe through your photos and ‘heart’ them much like they would on a smartphone.
(And you get an email informing you of the ‘heart’)

The Skylight frame even displays a “New Photos Have Arrived” button. That can be especially useful to give your viewers a heads-up.

The only model is the Skylight 10″ Plus frame, and it costs $159.00, which is in line with the competition.

I appreciate that Skylight originated from a Kickstarter campaign through the Harvard Innovation Lab, but the design doesn’t give me the kind of control I’m looking for to maintain my playlists.

So, I recommend you check out Nixplay…

Sticking with Nixplay
My ongoing relationship with my Nixplay frames hasn’t exactly been perfect. I’ve occasionally had delayed syncing problems, but Nixplay has ultimately come through for me.

  • Again, I really love Nixplay’s dynamic playlist feature through Dropbox. Nixplay also gives you 10 GB of free online storage. (You can pay for more.)
  • And the Nixplay ecosystem keeps getting better. Now there’s a mobile app, which give you on-the-go control of your frames. Plus, you can snap a photo with your smartphone and almost instantly add it to your photo frames. (Sorry, Skylight.)

There are a variety of Nixplay digital photo frames and sizes to choose from:

Nixplay Seeds are WiFi-only frames, which is just fine with me. But if you also want the old-school ability to upload pictures via SD cards, there’s the Nixplay Edge model.

Use this Visual Storytelling Strategy
I’ve talked previously about ways to maintain your public brand online.

But you also have a personal brand to feed that’s uniquely positioned for your family and friends.

And with distance often challenging the continuity of extended family units, displaying your photo playlists on WiFi digital photo frames is a wonderful way to communicate your family’s ongoing story.

#ShareYourPhotosNow

Dear NIX, Are Your Cloud Photo Frame Glitches Normal?

Recently I doubted the reliability of this new nixplay Cloud Frame.  But shouldn’t a new tech product be given a second chance to make a good first impression?  “Hello, tech support?”

Recently I doubted the reliability of this new nixplay Cloud Frame. But shouldn’t a new tech product be given a second chance to make a good first impression? “Hello, tech support?”

So I bought a nixplay Wi-Fi Cloud Digital Photo Frame a week ago to display some of my countless unseen family photos at home.

Aside from the NIX’s annoying branding decision to not capitalize the name of the product…(making it somewhat confusing to write about it in a grammatically correct way)
…I had some trouble getting the digital photo frame to work.

The frame should quickly receive its photos from NIX’s cloud once you send them there, but I found that actual performance may vary.

But before shipping the whole kit and kaboodle back to Amazon, I decided to give NIX an opportunity to troubleshoot my mediocre experience.

Help Me, NIX!
So I emailed their tech support team:

  • Subject: I’ve had varying results uploading photos to my nixplay Cloud Frame.
    On my first attempt, the new slideshows didn’t show up in the frame for a couple hours, and then they remained empty until the next day.  It wasn’t until that next afternoon when the photos actually showed up. 

    However, this morning, I uploaded a new slideshow to your cloud, and that one, along with its pictures appeared within minutes on the frame.  Also, every time I upload photos into a new album in your cloud, a few don’t make it, due to ‘server communication error.’ 

    Are these glitches ‘normal?’

nixplay_message submitted

Never on Saturday
Happily, tech support emailed back within a couple of hours.
Yes, they would be willing to talk with me.
At 2:17pm, a friendly nixplay nerd called me up to listen to my troubles.

I reviewed my middling experience with their Cloud Frame.
He zeroed in on the day my problems first occurred.

“Saturday?”

“Yes, Saturday.”

“Last Saturday?”

“Yes, that Saturday.”

“Aha!”
(He didn’t really say that.)

The problem:

  • Nixplay’s servers had an outage on Saturday… the very day I first tested my nixplay Cloud Frame.

Coincidence?… It would seem.
Bad timing?… Absolutely!

Faster than a Black Hole
I asked how long it should take on any other day to upload pictures to the frame.

“Minutes,” he replied.

Oh?

“Minutes,” he repeated.

(That’s less time than it took for a black hole to destroy the planet Vulcan in the recently adjusted Star Trek universe.)

Then he blurted out, “Sometimes even seconds.”

Uh huh.

Well, I guess the ill-timed server outage would explain the problem.

Later, I did a speed test on additional picture uploads to the frame.
His story held up.
It only took about 30 seconds.
(Impressive… most impressive.)

A Failure to Communicate
I then asked my new tech BFF about the ‘server communication error’ messages I’ve consistently received while uploading photos to their cloud, causing a few of them to disappear on their journey.

server communication error

He asked me if I was using Google Chrome as my web browser.
(No, I’m using Safari, thank you very much.)

He explained their platform is optimized for Google Chrome and suggested there might be a coding issue to blame for my Safari problems.

After hearing him say this, I began sensing some secret connection to Google. Perhaps NIX sees a Google-dominated universe powered by Google Chrome and Picasa.
Perhaps there’s more to it. Hard to know…

And there was clearly no sign of Flickr integration anywhere.
(just Picasa, Facebook and Instagram)
When I asked my tech bud about accessing my Flickr albums, he laughed nervously.

Cancel the Nix on the NIX
So I guess my nixplay Cloud Frame is working properly after all.
(It’s NIX’s servers that seem a bit dodgy. I hope that’s not too frequent a problem…)

So I’ve decided to keep my nixplay Cloud Frame.

  • As for the communications errors during photo transfers, I suppose it’s not really that big a deal to re-upload a few pictures. It’s just an extra step.
    (And what tech is totally perfect?)
  • My wife already loves the photos I’ve got rotating onto the frame…
    That’s a big win for the ‘HIG!’ (Home IT Guy)
  • And nixplay’s tech support was speedy and friendly.
    (Thank you NIX!)
  • And don’t forget the frame’s cool motion sensor, which enables the device to turn itself off when you’re not around!

For what it’s worth, I say,
GO FOR IT!

Add in some NIX to your life.
And let the photos flow…