[. . . ] isclearfromcablesascablescouldpullthe ·Consult service technician if the a standoutofPhotoFrametothefloor. PhotoFrame does not operate normally whenyouhavefollowedtheinstructionsin Temperatureandhumiditylimitations 6 thismanual. Operatingtemperature: ·Thecasingcovershouldbeopenedonlyby 0°~40°(Celsius)/32°~113°(Fahrenheit) qualifiedservicepersonnel. Humidity:20%~80% ·KeepthePhotoFrameoutofdirectsunlight and away from stoves or any other heat 1. 3 Recycling source. [. . . ] PresstheModebuttontoleavethismenu andplaytheslideshow. 3 · PressUpandDowntoselectYes/No. Pressthe Mode buttontoleavethis menuandplaytheslideshow, browseor calendar mode. GettingStarted ENGLISH 2 · PressDownto SlideShow/Time/ Date/12/24hr andpressthePlay/OKbutton. 3. 3. 3Choosing ClockMode . 4. 1 UsingyourPhotoFrame ViewPhotos 4. 2. 3Calendar Mode Todisplayphotosinclockmode. 1 Inslideshowmode, usetheLeftandRight tomovequicklythroughthephotos. 2 PressPlay/OKtotheaccessBrowseMode, pressagaintogotothecalendar mode. 2 IntheMainMenuselectphotos, selectthe sourceasthetypeofmemorycardinstalled (SD/MMC, MemoryStick, xDCards, USB). 4. 2 FindaPhoto 4. 2. 1 BrowseMode 1 2 Whendisplayingphotosintheslideshow, movethroughthephotos, pressing Left andRighttofindandselectaphoto. 4. 2. 4 ThumbnailAccessandNavigation AlargenumberofPhotoscanbeviewedquickly usingthumbnailmode 1 · PresstheModebuttontoaccessthe MainMenu. 3 · Press Left, Right, UpandDown tomovebetweenphotosandseealarger versionoftheimage. 4. 2. 2 SlideshowMode Slideshowmodeisenteredonceyouturnon thePhotoFrame. Press Left andRight to movequicklythroughthephotos. Note1: Thefrequencyoftheslideshowcanbeadjusted. Note2: Photosareeasilyeditablefromslideshowmode bypressingtheMenubutton. Togodirectly tothumbnailmodeformreadthephotomenu section. thumbnailmodeformreadthephoto menusection. 4 · PressthePlay/OKbuttontoleavethis slideshow. PresstheModeorMenubuttontoleavethis menuandplaytheslideshow. 2 · PressDownto Transitionand press Right. · Press UpandDowntoselect from the list asfollows: Random, NoTransition, Effect1, Effect2, Effect3, . . . . . . , Effect21. · PressPlay/OKtoconfirm. PressModeorMenu toleavethismenu andplaytheslideshow. Note2: Randomplaysdifferenteffectsoutofsequence duringtheslideshowtransition. 11 Settings 6. 3 Frequency 6. 4 Collage ENGLISH Usethisfunctiontoselecthowlongeachphoto Toshowmultiplephotosarrangedonthescreen atthesametimeselectcollage. · Press UptoSetup andpressthe Play/OKbutton. 1 · PresstheModebuttontoaccessthe MainMenu. · Press UpandDowntoselect 5seconds, 10Seconds, 30Seconds, 1Minute, 5Minutes, 30Minutes, 1 Hour, 4Hours, 12Hours or 1Day. Thisfunctionappliestoalltheslideshowsstored · PressPlay/OKtoconfirm. onallmedia. PresstheModeorMenubuttontoleave andplaytheslideshow. 2 ·Press DowntoAutoDim. 3 · PressRighttoselect AutoDim Timer. · PressPlay/OKtoapplythesettings. 4 · PressUpandDowntoadjustthe hours. [. . . ] First, makesureyousetCurrentTime, Auto-off at, andAuto-onatcorrectly. DigitalPhotoFrame willautomaticallyturnoffitsdisplayexactlyat theAuto-offtime. Ifthetimehasalreadypassed fortheday, itwillstartenteringAuto-offstatus at the specified time from the next day. PhotoFrame issupports progressive JPEG formattedpicture, maximumsize800x600. FrequentlyAskedQuestions 1 ENGLISH . Frequentlyasked . ServiceandWarranty CEDeclarationofConformity Philips Consumer Lifestyle declare under our responsibilitythattheproductisinconformity withthefollowingstandards · EN60950:2000(Safetyrequirementof InformationTechnologyEquipment) · EN55022:1998(RadioDisturbance requirementofInformationTechnology Equipment) · EN55024:1998(Immunityrequirementof InformationTechnologyEquipment) · EN61000-3-2:2000(LimitsforHarmonic CurrentEmission) · EN61000-3-3:1995(LimitationofVoltage FluctuationandFlicker) followingprovisionsofdirectivesapplicable · 73/23/EEC(LowVoltageDirective) · 89/336/EEC(EMCDirective) · 93/68/EEC(AmendmentofEMCandLow VoltageDirective) andisproducedbyamanufacturing organizationonISO9000level. RecyclingInformationforCustomers Philipsestablishestechnicallyandeconomically viableobjectivestooptimizetheenvironmental performanceoftheorganization'sproduct, serviceandactivities. Fromtheplanning, designandproduction stages, Philipsemphasizestheimportantof makingproductsthatcaneasilyberecycled. At Philips, end-of-lifemanagementprimarilyentails participationinnationaltake-backinitiatives andrecyclingprogramswheneverpossible, preferablyincooperationwithcompetitors. [. . . ]