![]() ![]() Setup is very straight forward and should take less than ten minutes (most of that time will be spent letting the device boot and update its software). So how does the Nixplay work? Let’s take a look at the setup required, how to send photos to the frame, and then get down to the good, the bad, and the verdict. It’s perfectly reasonable to have a small fee when the bandwidth and storage demands go up. Given that nearly every internet-enabled digital picture frame requires a paid subscription for full functionality, we’re quite pleased to see that the Nixplay only requires a paid subscription for users who actually, well, use the service a lot. ![]() Users who want to manage multiple frames and/or increase their storage can subscribe to the Nixplay Plus plan for $3.99 a month, which will allow for up to five frames per account, 30GB of cloud-based photo storage, 50 unique slideshows, and all photos will be stored in their original resolution. The free standard account is good for one frame, up to 5,000 photos, and 10 unique slideshows (essentially the Nixplay equivalent of categories/albums). Each Nixplay unit comes with a free standard Nixplay account that allows you to upload photos, import photos from Facebook, Instagram, and Picasa Web albums, as well as accept photos via email (each Nixplay account has a custom email address). Although every Nixplay unit has an SD card slot and USB port for local file loading, the frame’s killer feature is the cloud-based photo management.
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