Bringing the family photos into the kitchen
Step 3: Here’s the tricky part. You can’t just glue the LCD screen to the back of the mat border. You’ll need to somehow keep the LCD screen perfectly centered and held secure in the shadow box and have it magically centered in the mat border as well.
Buy some 1/4-inch foam core and cut it to fit perfectly inside the shadow box. Then cut out a hole in the center of the foam core that is the exact size of the perimeter of your LCD screen. You can now fit your LCD screen inside the foam core and secure it with duct tape on the front and back.
Place the whole thing into the shadow box along with the mat board. If you have had the help of the frame people then you should have perfect alignment. If you do it yourself, you may have to do this a few times before you get the measurements right.
Step 4: The next layer is the computer. Find some thick cardboard or particleboard to mount the laptop to. Cut this board material to fit exactly inside the shadow box. Cut a small hole in this board material over the place where you need to run the LCD wire to the motherboard. Once you screw the laptop to this board material, you can then lay this layer on top of the back of the LCD monitor.
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Courtesy Of Travis McElfresh The shadow box with the computer part of the laptop taped to the cardboard. |
Step 5: Now it’s time to hang your digital picture frame. For the cleanest looking mounting, find a wall with a closet behind it so you can run power and speaker cable to the computer out of sight. I simply drilled a 3/4-inch hole in the wall behind the frame to run power and speaker cable.
The big kitchen debut
This first digital picture frame was a present to my wife. On Christmas morning she came down stairs to find a wrapped present stuck to the kitchen wall. The plan was to have her take off the wrapping and find picture of our family. I would then use the remote to flip to another picture when she wasn’t looking for a surprise effect.
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Courtesy Of Travis McElfresh The system runs off Windows XP Media Center Edition, which gives easy access to folders of digital photos and music. |
I gathered up bits of my crushed ego and quickly got a picture up of the family and then gave her the remote. Within minutes, she had figured out how to look at the “Best Pictures” folder and select her favorite artists and albums to listen to. The wireless AR speakers I placed strategically on top of the refrigerator and bookshelf were an added bonus.
To my pleasant surprise, this digital addition to the kitchen was quickly adopted and used multiple times per day. I usually select a new picture in the morning before leaving for work and I return to find our favorite music playing in the kitchen. (I did play around with Internet widgets such as weather, recipes, calendars, e-mail, etc. But we found that we’d rather just use a regular computer and let the digital picture frame be about the pictures.)
Simply having access to our favorite photos has completely changed the kitchen experience and encourages us to continue capturing those family moments on our digital cameras. In fact, it gave me an excuse to go out and buy that Canon Rebel XT I was drooling over.
The tweaking continues: Beaming 8MB files over the wireless network as I added new photos was slowing down the slideshow performance so I eliminated this bottleneck by adding SyncToy, an insanely easy-to-configure application available on Microsoft.com’s XP downloads page. SyncToy will keep two folders located anywhere on your network automatically synched according to your preferred schedule.
Of course, commercial digital picture frames have since come a long way. The Internet options remain, but others now let you load images with a media card or yes, even over your wireless network. But I’m pretty happy with my self-made version, and the customization it allows. Now, maybe I need one for the office …
Travis McElfresh is the director of technology for MSNBC.com.
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