Page 9 of 15 FirstFirst ... 7891011 ... LastLast
Results 81 to 90 of 150

Thread: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

  1. #81
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Posts
    5,680

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by John Kasaian View Post
    Did I miss something? Did Fuji cease making color sheet film?
    No, but they don't make color negative film in sheets.

    Rick "who would love to find plain-old Reala in 4x5 sheets" Denney

  2. #82
    ARS KC2UU
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Morristown, NJ USA
    Posts
    741

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by Roger Cole View Post
    Oh, thanks for the list - I still have and sometimes use a fountain pen. I have electronic gadgets with vacuum tubes and will buy more when I get back into ham radio some day. Love that vintage gear that lights up in the dark. I'm typing this while using a CRT monitor and have a CRT TV (with no cable or satellite.)

    And I like using code on the radio, too.

    Roger "the closest thing to a Luddite a network engineer could be" Cole
    Roger:

    You forgot to mention that most (seriously) high power RF is still produced with vacuum tubes. Not likely they will ever be replaced in that application.

    _ . _ _ . _ . . . _ _ _ . . _ . . _
    All natural images are analog. But the retina converts them to digital on their way to the brain.

  3. #83
    Drew Wiley
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    SF Bay area, CA
    Posts
    18,787

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    The latest technology helps you look cool and think so too ... everything hi-tech and
    electronic is therefore preferable ... like the punk who pulled out his gun and recently held up a convenience store across town one night and decided to get away running through the dark on foot ... wearing piezo shoes which sparkle with every step!

  4. #84
    Mike Anderson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    681

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by Marko View Post
    No, I meant steam machine, horse buggies, fountain pen, typewriter, telegraph, newspapers, vacuum tube, CRTs, film and such...

    Yes, I still keep my Mont Blancs and Rotrings around but we are not using them for this exchange, are we? Did I mention snail mail too?
    And I wish they'd rip out those damn cable cars from San Francisco. They're noisy, slow, and unsafe. And those dusty hiking trails - they should all be paved so a Segway can go over them.

    ...Mike
    Last edited by Mike Anderson; 13-Mar-2011 at 18:32.

  5. #85

    Join Date
    Nov 1999
    Location
    San Clemente, California
    Posts
    3,849

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by rdenney View Post
    No, but they don't make color negative film in sheets...
    Assuming you want 4x5:

    http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/produc...4x5_Quick.html

    https://www.badgergraphic.com/store/..._detail&p=3477

    http://www.japanexposures.com/shop/p...roducts_id=198

    http://www.japanexposures.com/shop/p...roducts_id=154

    http://www.japanexposures.com/shop/p...roducts_id=196

    Although Dirk may have a little trouble at the moment filling your order for any of the last three.


    Reala was never available in sheets.

  6. #86
    Format Omnivore Brian C. Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 1999
    Location
    Everett, WA
    Posts
    2,997

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by Sal Santamaura View Post
    Although Dirk may have a little trouble at the moment filling your order for any of the last three.
    Dirk is fine. But there may be a slight delay filling your order right now.

  7. #87
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Posts
    5,680

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by rguinter View Post
    Roger:

    You forgot to mention that most (seriously) high power RF is still produced with vacuum tubes. Not likely they will ever be replaced in that application.

    _ . _ _ . _ . . . _ _ _ . . _ . . _
    Vacuum-tube technology is being replaced by solid-state devices more and more. Most TV and FM stations are moving or have moved to solid-state transmitters as a matter of life-cycle cost. The tubes are just too expensive, and for a 24/7 commercial-service transmitter must be replaced too often. Also, they don't show a lot of redundancy, which is a big deal in commercial service. And in "other" applications, solid-state RF transmission is becoming the norm. Redundancy is even more important and capital cost less so in many of those applications.

    What has made solid-state transmitters more expensive is the need to gang devices in parallel to keep the power on each one down, while tubes can be made as big as necessary. The price increases linearly with power output for solid-state, but at a slower rate for vacuum-tube technology. But even in the 30-KW transmitter-power range of most FM and TV stations, the total life-cycle costs favor solid-state approaches.

    Most amateur amplifiers still use vacuum tubes, but there are serious inroads at the high end from solid-state transmitter amplifiers. Hams have not exactly kept up with their self-image of being cutting-edge technologists, however. I'm sure there were people who said the basic 100-watt barefoot transmitter would never go solid-state, but now you can't buy anything else.

    Rick "-.- .-. ----. -.." Denney

  8. #88
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Posts
    5,680

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by Sal Santamaura View Post
    Assuming you want 4x5:

    ...several listings for new old stock no longer in production, or still available in Japan only...

    Reala was never available in sheets.
    Sad that Reala was never made in sheets. I have really enjoyed it in roll-film over the years.

    I have never liked 160S, which was all that Fuji ever put in the Quickload form factor that I ever saw available in the U.S., at least. I could never get any saturation out of that stuff, though I'm sure it's fine for the commercial/fashion work is was made for. Maybe others can do more with it for landscape work. Of course, anything in Quickloads is old stock waiting to be bought up--they have stopped producing everything in that form factor as I understand it.

    And buying from Japan directly? I'm not sure that undermines my point; certainly not in meaning even if in fact.

    Rick "hoping this is the biggest problem Dirk has to think about at the moment" Denney

  9. #89

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Southern California
    Posts
    2,736

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Jones View Post
    The Amish around here still do well with horse buggies and farm equipment.
    If only they didn't consider photography the same evil, latest hi-tech technology as the sparkling shoes and the segway, it sounds as if they could have a great following on this board!



    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Jones View Post
    When young, we were taught to use a pen so our writing could be visually as well as grammatically eloquent. Neither is common now.
    Radio telegraphy is sometimes the only means of communications even now in emergencies, even though competent operators are becoming rare. I still use vacuum tube test equipment, and have radios going back to the 1920s. There was an eloquence and economy of design to some early gear that is sadly lacking in equipment that can be marginally improved by adding a few thousand more transistors.
    Well, they taught us common sense too back then, and you need only look at some posts here to see how little of it has remained. It's easy to wax poetic about "Roaring Twenties" until one remembers what it was like to not have penicillin for example or how many people died of TB in those "good old days" and other such periods... And let's not even mention dental care.

    Yes, I'm sure those times were awesome and that if I had my kids then, those two or three out of five that would've survived the age of 2 would've enjoyed unrestricted childhood much more than the kids today do. But ungrateful that I am, I'm really happy to be living in the now, which enabled me to raise *all* my kids to successful adulthood and which gives me better than good chance of living long enough to see my grandkids grow up. If that means having to suffer the nuisance of frequent technology breakthroughs, so be it...

    And just so we keep this on topic, those same "Roaring Twenties" were the beginning of the Age of Kodak - "you press the button, we do the rest". It (Kodak) survived and outlasted most of those other great technologies of its time, but now the time has come when there is nothing left to do after pressing the button. Largely thanks to technology they helped develop but then failed to transition to in time to save themselves.

  10. #90

    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    139

    Re: Kodak Financial Woes Deepen: Film Future?

    I haven't looked at the Kodak 2010 10-K yet. In the recent past, Kodak was making money on film and losing money on digital. That may change as movie studios cut over to digital. But I'd still expect that a smaller profitable film business is still possible for Kodak. Film is mature and very little R&D is required. But they will need to scale their facilities to match the market demand.

Similar Threads

  1. Film Still Popular Among Pros
    By Michael Kadillak in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 51
    Last Post: 21-Sep-2015, 06:04
  2. The hopeful future of film photography
    By Ed Eubanks in forum On Photography
    Replies: 414
    Last Post: 20-Feb-2011, 07:41
  3. converting slides to B&W
    By Magnus W in forum Digital Processing
    Replies: 14
    Last Post: 31-Jul-2006, 04:51
  4. film loading/unloading
    By Barret in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 2-Aug-2004, 12:24

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •