Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Ok, my take is that this guy was probably a mid level or high level technician that was laid off and was very angry with EK. He had some info, but not deep enough to really be correct, and his premises about 'no new products' is simply wrong. There has been a revolution in couplers in the last 4 years alone.
In addition, several of the 'names' there were also laid off, but he accused them of being 'insiders'. Some of those professional engineers he named are frequent posters in a number of photo forums and are not violently against Kodak in any way. They have moved on to new jobs. After all, being a good competent engineer and being laid off is not a black mark, so good people can get new, good jobs and have no reaction to Kodak over it. People laid off at the bottom of the ratings will have a harder time and probably will express it.
As for the building issue, the reason I mention it is because it is wrong and yet has been printed in the local papers with correct data for several years now. And, it can be viewed by a simple drive by or by watching local news on TV. He wasn't paying attention through his haze of anger is the bottom line there.
New products do not include lower chloride emulsions, but rather higher chloride emulsions in color paper, and that has been so since Supra I many years ago when RA first came out. That is how it develops so rapidly. Several good friends of mine worked on it after I left the project, and one helped me with the Azo type emulsion I make, albeit with no proprietary information.
The R&D on 2 electron sensitization and Paul Gilman's 25,000 speed film are two examples of recent improvements. One is being gradually commerciallized across the board, while the other is not going into product development. The new couplers have, for the most part, gone into products giving huge improvements in dye stability. Endura paper was the first beneficiary of that, while Vision film for motion picture use was the first film to use 2 electron sensitization, but now all products are getting the benefit as upgrades come along.
Now, here is the key... Just like automobile models and refrigerator models use some parts in common, film does too. This does not mean that they are the same, nor does it mean fraud.
As for insider trading, when I worked on a specific project that used cobalt salts, we all were advised by the legal department that we would be fired if we were caught dabbling in cobalt futures on the stock market. I've said before, Kodak keeps its people to a high ethical standard.
I would have preferred Carl Kohrt as CEO over Dan Carp, but I would never spew the vitriol over Carp that I saw there. I've heard him talk and knew Carl personally, but I was not privy to the reasoning behind the decision. Part of the explanation was that Kodak wanted a more marketing oriented CEO than a technical oriented CEO.
PE
In addition, several of the 'names' there were also laid off, but he accused them of being 'insiders'. Some of those professional engineers he named are frequent posters in a number of photo forums and are not violently against Kodak in any way. They have moved on to new jobs. After all, being a good competent engineer and being laid off is not a black mark, so good people can get new, good jobs and have no reaction to Kodak over it. People laid off at the bottom of the ratings will have a harder time and probably will express it.
As for the building issue, the reason I mention it is because it is wrong and yet has been printed in the local papers with correct data for several years now. And, it can be viewed by a simple drive by or by watching local news on TV. He wasn't paying attention through his haze of anger is the bottom line there.
New products do not include lower chloride emulsions, but rather higher chloride emulsions in color paper, and that has been so since Supra I many years ago when RA first came out. That is how it develops so rapidly. Several good friends of mine worked on it after I left the project, and one helped me with the Azo type emulsion I make, albeit with no proprietary information.
The R&D on 2 electron sensitization and Paul Gilman's 25,000 speed film are two examples of recent improvements. One is being gradually commerciallized across the board, while the other is not going into product development. The new couplers have, for the most part, gone into products giving huge improvements in dye stability. Endura paper was the first beneficiary of that, while Vision film for motion picture use was the first film to use 2 electron sensitization, but now all products are getting the benefit as upgrades come along.
Now, here is the key... Just like automobile models and refrigerator models use some parts in common, film does too. This does not mean that they are the same, nor does it mean fraud.
As for insider trading, when I worked on a specific project that used cobalt salts, we all were advised by the legal department that we would be fired if we were caught dabbling in cobalt futures on the stock market. I've said before, Kodak keeps its people to a high ethical standard.
I would have preferred Carl Kohrt as CEO over Dan Carp, but I would never spew the vitriol over Carp that I saw there. I've heard him talk and knew Carl personally, but I was not privy to the reasoning behind the decision. Part of the explanation was that Kodak wanted a more marketing oriented CEO than a technical oriented CEO.
PE