Gerald C Koch
Member
Back in the 1990's, when APS was introduced, I remember silently thanking all the millions of people who bought point-and-shoot cameras because their usage of film helped drive and fund further film development.
As for plastic cameras, most of my life I bought and used the professional Nikons (F to F4), Leica M's, and Hasselblads. Yet one weekend I became enamoured with a camera that I'd often reviled: a Canon Rebel (a 'G' aka 500N). I found it fun and easy to use, I enjoyed its features and modes, and the photos with its inexpensive 50/1.8 were really very good. From this life lesson, I've learned not to despise any camera.
Kodak was good at inventing odd film sizes such as 127, 828, 620, APS, disk. ... Ufnortunately not for any nobility of purpose. Most of them did not survive for very long but some like 127 and 620 were very popular..
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