Roku HD1000 Portable Multimedia Player User Manual


 
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Tip #2: To play or not to play
When you press the Slideshow button on the Main Menu, insert
an image card, or launch an Art Pack, your HD1000 automatically
advances through the images on the selected media source. Some-
times, you may want to linger over a particular image. This is easy:
just press the Play/Pause button on the remote. Notice that a pause
icon appears momentarily in the lower right corner of the screen.
The image will now stay on screen until you manually change it.
You can use the Next or Previous keys on the remote to move at
your own pace, or you can press Play/Pause again to resume auto-
matic advance. The Options screen (see Tip #1) allows you to set the
length of time each picture is displayed.
If you’re browsing pictures in the thumbnail browser, there are two
ways to launch into the full-screen viewer, as well. Press Select with
a particular image highlighted to view that image. The image will
stay on screen until you change it. Or, you can press Play/Pause
with a particular image highlighted to begin viewing a slideshow
starting with that image.
Tip #3: Wait! Wait! Back up a couple!
Whether you’re clicking your way through your images manually
using the Next/Previous keys or letting the HD1000 do the work
for you, you may nd yourself wanting to back up a few pictures
or skip over a few. Even a high-performance image viewer like the
HD1000 takes a couple of seconds to decode a large le, so it would
be a bummer to have to wait for each picture to come up before
you could press Next or Previous again.
Happily, there is no need to wait. If you want to back up three
pictures, just press the Previous button on your remote three times.
Same goes for skipping forward.
Tip #4: The Smart way to put a square peg into a
round hole
While television is moving on into the brave new wide-screen
world, photography is still pretty much back in the old square (well,
4:3 anyway) box. Therefore, most pictures taken with a digital
camera won’t t perfectly on a 16:9 HDTV. Also, many artists (espe-
cially the pesky Renaissance types) were a bit lax in maintaining a
proper 16:9 wide-screen aspect ratio as well.
Fortunately, your HD1000 has more than one way to t a non-16:9
image onto your wide-screen HDTV.
First up is the most basic: “Fit.” In Fit mode, the entire image is dis-
played centered on the screen. If the image isn’t the same shape as
your screen, the remainder of the screen is lled with black.