Fujifilm's instax mini LiPlay instant camera strikes out with audio

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,646   +199
Staff member
Facepalm: Fuji's "sound" function is a terrible gimmick that adds no value. In fact, it takes away from what may otherwise be a decent product. Fortunately, the LCD screen may still make it worth buying for some.

Fujifilm this week introduced the smallest and most lightweight version of its instax mini instant camera ever.

The new instax mini LiPlay features a 2.7-inch LCD monitor for framing and photo review purposes. I’m typically not for features that dumb down the photography experience (replacing the viewfinder with a screen certainly qualifies) but in this instance, photo paper isn’t cheap. Most people buying this sort of camera are doing it for the novelty factor and don’t want to be bothered with trying to manually nail exposure, etc.

Fuji’s other new flagship feature isn’t quite as useful.

The instax mini LiPlay has a “Sound” function that can record up to 10 seconds of audio when a photo is captured. This sound data along with the photo is then uploaded to Fuji servers and accessible by scanning a QR code printed on your picture.

There are two major problems here. First, who wants an ugly QR code plastered right on their already small print? If anything, print it on the back of the photo or along the border, not directly on the image. And second, Fuji will only store your sound and photo combo for one year. After that, the QR code is forever useless, yet stuck on your images.

The Fuji instax mini LiPlay is offered in white, black and gold color schemes and goes on sale June 14 priced at $159.95.

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They’re trying to innovate at least! Personally I’d just buy a mini printer and use my smartphone. Don’t really understand why users need this and a smartphone.
 
They’re trying to innovate at least! Personally I’d just buy a mini printer and use my smartphone. Don’t really understand why users need this and a smartphone.
Fair point, my only guess that it is cheaper than most cell phones and if it gets stolen or lost, you are not as worried as if you lost your cell. Well I guess you would be worried if you took compromising photos of yourself...
 
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