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Planet Toys Planet Earth Digital Microscope Kit

Planet Toys Planet Earth Digital Microscope Kit

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Brand: Planet Toys
Category: Toy

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $19.99
You Save: $30.00 (60%)



New (24) from $19.99

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 125

Format: Cd
Platform: Windows
Operating System: Windows
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2
Dimensions (in): 11.9 x 11.4 x 4.3

Model: 1233
UPC: 673579012332
EAN: 0673579012332
ASIN: B0017T3IG6

Release Date: August 5, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • Includes microscope and digital camera
  • One eyepiece adaptor, four prepared slides, and eight blank slides
  • One pair tweezers and four plastic bags
  • One explorer book
  • One software CD Rom and one special planet earth CD

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Planet Earth Toys are designed to evoke children's natural curiosity to explore and learn about our extraordinary world. Includes everything you need to magnify nature. Observe and learn about planet earths microscopic world, use the webcam to create a snapshot of your slide, and connect the webcam to the microscope and view objects on your computer. The all-in-one digital microscope, digital camera, microscope and web cam!

Amazon.com Review
The Digital Microscope from Planet Earth Toys will have children ages 6 and up enjoying themselves while exploring the world around them. Designed to evoke natural curiosity, children can look up close at plants, animals, water, and more, through the microscope eyepiece, or on the computer screen with the included web cam attachment.

What We Think


Fun Factor:

Durability:

(what this means)

The Good: Microscope and web cam can be connected to the computer for display on screen and saving images

The Bad: Image quality could have been sharper and with more resolution

In a Nutshell: Toy microscope for children offers educational fun, letting them explore their curiosity

At a Glance

Ages: 6 and up
Requires: 3 AA batteries


The Digital Microscope enables children ages 6 to explore the world around them. View larger.
Digital Microscope with Three Magnification Levels
The Digital Microscope set requires three AA batteries (not included). A screwdriver is needed to open up the battery cover, and after they are installed, pushing the on/off button turns on the necessary light.

We put in the prepared slide of a flower petal and turned the focusing ring until we saw it show up in the microscope as a pretty random pattern of spiked edges. With three magnification levels at 100x, 300x, and 900x, we were able to take three distinct looks at the petal.

Although the microscope provided loads of fun, we did notice a couple shortcomings. First, the eyepiece of the microscope was very small, making it difficult to peer into and, second, although made out of metal, the base still felt slightly unstable. Nonetheless, these minor issues certainly did not prevent us from using the microscope, but did detract slightly from the overall user experience.

Web Cam Lets You Connect Microscope to Computer
Included in the Digital Microscope Kit is a web cam that can be used to observe large objects that don't fit under the microscope. In addition, by simply screwing on an adapter and installing the included software, you can connect the web cam directly onto the top of the microscope, letting you see the microscopic images on your computer screen. This is, of course, a toy microscope so we didn't expect professional results, but we still wish that the images on screen could have been a little clearer. Additionally, because there is a split-second delay to send the information from the microscope to the computer, it can be difficult to focus.

Once connected to your computer, you can take photos and capture videos of all everything you are looking at under the microscope by simply clicking a button.

Create Calendars, Cards, Posters, and More!
With the images you save, you can easily create calendars, cards, and other projects. Since the software includes templates, creating a project book is as easy as dragging and dropping images into the predefined spaces.

The software requires Windows 98/ME/200/XP or above, a Pentium 200MHz processor or faster, 64MB of RAM or higher, a video card with 4MB of RAM minimum, 24-bit display, a CD-ROM drive, and an available USB port.

Activity Booklet Helps Get You Started
An included activity booklet includes six projects to help novices get started. These activities include observing leaves, pond water, and crystals. The kit includes eight prepared slides with items such as an ostrich feather, aloe gel, celery, and tree bark. And of course, you can get anything you want and place it on an empty slide to look at it in full detail with the microscope. The included tweezers and plastic bags lets you handle your slides carefully so you'll be sure to get a good specimen.

What's in the Box
Digital microscope, detachable web cam with USB cable, stand for web cam, eight prepared slides, eight blank slides, eight slide covers, tweezers, four plastic bag, activity book, software CD-ROM.



Included web cam can be used to observe large objects that don't fit under the microscope. View larger.


Or you can attach the web cam to the microscope and view the images on your computer screen. View larger.




Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Can't beat it for the price - how to make the web cam work   January 1, 2009
Anne W.
This is a great tool/toy for kids FOR THE PRICE. It is an introduction to microscopes for my 8 and 3 year old boys - they want to put everything under the lens - food, clothes, and themselves. The microscope allows them to understand how a light microscope works (i.e. if light can't pass through the item, you can't see anything) and that there is a whole world of textures and colors all around them that they never knew existed. I would not recommend this for a high school student - the magnification is not good enough to see on a cellular level.

When I first used the web cam, I was very disappointed because the image was too blurry to make out anything. However, I found that by unscrewing the cover just a bit, the images were much better and I could see as well as most inexpensive web cams allow (it is a lot like focusing a camera lens). Since you can attach the web cam to the microscope, everyone can see the slide at once and no one has to squint into the tiny little eye hole. The software is very easy to use and allows you to record snapshots and videos.

The focus is good on 100x and a little trickier on 300x and 900x. (My 8 year old is still able to focus it, though.) The 900x is hard to see - I think the light is not strong enough. It works best on thin, flat specimens. Some of the things we saw were paper and clothes fibers (and ink patterns), feathers, hair, fingernails, salt and sugar plus the slides it came with which are leaf, petal, ostrich and goose feathers, aloe gel, tree bark, cotton, and celery.

The slides are flexible plastic and probably the part that will last the longest in our house. The microscope itself is mostly plastic and would probably not hold up long if tossed in a toy box. The microscope tilts on its base, which is really nice for short scientists.

I did not give this a five for fun because it is not roller coaster ride fun, but this is one toy that my children are truly enthusiastic about playing with. I gave it a 3 for durability because it is mostly made of plastic. On the positive side, the base is heavy enough to keep it from toppling easily. As long as it is properly stored, I expect it to last until my children are ready for the next step up.

Bottom line: I doubt you can find a better deal for an new entry level microscope (I paid $15). Adjust the web cam and you have an enriching toy for kids ages 3-12.



1 out of 5 stars Camera woes with Vista   December 27, 2008
Bone (Florida)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Not expecting this to be anything other than a basic toy with variable results, we got this for our son for Christmas so he could display close-ups of whatever he's investigating on a nice big screen using the camera. The microscope would be a bonus for when he's ready to use it. Expectations weren't high, but an unusable Christmas day gift makes for a sad child.

Anyway, on to the camera problem. If you're running Vista you may have problems getting the camera to work. The camera itself is the Chinese ZSMC ZS0211. Do a search on it and marvel at all the hits, hits for people looking for drivers! From which we can conclude it's a bargain basement generic webcam. The packaging states "Windows 98/ME/200/XP or above", I guess that statement was written before Jan 2007 and the public release of Vista.

Strangely, the driver on the disk is dated early 2008, but being unsigned means Vista doesn't want to use it. I'm not going to do the kernel debug dance to run it, assuming that actually works these days. The driver on their non-public searchable web page also fails to work. It's V1.0 dated Aug 2008, well, the page has that date on it. It looks like they did the minimum to get this working and then ceased development and support. Vista has been around for almost two years, so we're looking at an old product here, despite these driver dates.

We didn't test the software - no point with an unusable camera. The 'scope itself is rather cheap plastic. I doubt it would have a long life expectancy in kidland. Amazon will be getting this product back.



3 out of 5 stars If you are having webcam problems   December 27, 2008
Shannon N. Puckett
Loosen (or maybe tighten a little) the lens on the web camera to focus and get a clear picture. The software was a little tricky to get installed. The included software on the disk never completed installation, but a link provided took me to the website to download the latest. The generic webcam software worked fine (after loosening the lens on the camera), but we still haven't been able to get the 'Planet Earth' view/capture software to recognize the camera yet.

The microscope is OK for viewing the included slides at 100 and 300x. At 900x it is difficult to focus, but not impossible. We also haven't been able to focus the webcam clearly with the microscope.

We only paid [...]so it was still worth the price.



1 out of 5 stars Yes, it's a piece of junk   December 26, 2008
jdogg (North Texas)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Santa got this for my 7 year old for XMAS. What a bummer. I had the screwdriver and the super glue out to make repairs before we even got the thing set up. The construction is flimsy. The lens is terrible. The software is rudimentary.
Great idea just poor execution. My 5 year old got The Bionic eye and that seems much more usable and durable.



1 out of 5 stars Not the best way to make biology exciting   December 25, 2008
Wera Nopnirapath (Boston, MA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The good:
- none

The bad:
- Horrible lenses, giving out poor image clarity. My niece and nephew took a lot at it once and lost interest completely. It is blurry even with 100x so you would not make anything out of it at 300x or even 900x
- The camera lacks color vividness. Even with the pink ostrich feather, the pictures still come out Grey.
- The poor focusing camera. The camera itself does not give a good image to start with. With the attachable lenses screwed all the way, the image will be out of the focus. You have to loosen up the lenses piece to get a focused picture but the image quality is still poor.
- Not very easy to use, after you focus the image with your eyepiece lenses, you swap the camera in, you will have to refocus the pictures.

It was probably the most hyped toys for my niece and nephew, might because their mom is a scientist. But they lost interest after a few minutes of playing with it, with adults supervised. There is nothing 'fun' about it and not the best way to make biology exciting.

do not buy. it's the waste of money.


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