This photo frame was used briefly at a memorial.

Like New condition with no cosmetic flaws.

According to Philips:

The 16-bit (65,536 potential colors) display has built-in memory, which allows you to store between 110 to 150 photos internally. Additionally, around back you'll find slots for Compact Flash, SD, MMC, xD memory cards, giving you the ability to display hundreds or even thousands of photos. You can choose to leave the images on the card or transfer however many will fit into the display's remaining internal memory. Another option is to upload photos from your camera or computer to the display via a USB cable. 

The one advantage to transferring the photos to the display's internal memory is that, as part of the copying process, the unit automatically resizes the images to 720x540 pixels--or as close as it can get to that size. If your image won't quite translate to 720x540, the display adds black bars to the top and bottom or the sides rather than cropping your image--which is a good thing; some frames chop off large parts of your picture. Since the screen has 680x480 pixels, Philips says that some cropping may occur, but it must be minor because we didn't notice much in the various images we viewed. The biggest impact of reducing your images' size (along with their file size) is that transition effects in slide show mode (you can select from 14 transition effects, as well as random mode) work more smoothly. In other words, if you have a fairly high-capacity memory card (512MB or greater), you're probably best off just loading the card with photos and leaving it in the photo frame.