Maybe APUG is too big.
At the same time that there are folk in this thread questioning Kodak's commitment to film - particularly B&W film there is this thread:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
where people are falling over themselves to exchange info on how to be sure to get the latest version of a Kodak B&W film.
Go figure!
For the first nine months of 2007, Kodak's film products group accounted for $1.5 billion in revenue. But it also accounted for $589 million in gross profit for those nine months.
Ilford does not support 220 for their HP5 but Kodak supports 220 for their Tri-X 320 so I am going with Kodak on this one.
It's worth saying that in the 70's,80's and 90's Kodak had a total monopoly of the US market, and it was only in the 90's that Fuji began to eat heavily into Kodak's share of the US market. They had already taken a lions share of the European market.
What ever we say the marketing people at Kodak were reading the wrong signs and they still haven't learnt.
Ian
Eddy;
In the 90s, that sales figure was closer to $20B. And it was all film. And therein lies the problem.
PE
Ron,
Actually, while still steep, I don't think the decline is as great as it seems,
That $20B figure from the 90's included chemicals - which have been spun off and so no longer show up as Kodak revenues.
That figure from the 90s was after Tennesee Eastman was spun off, as well as Texas Eastman. Even so, they contributed little to that huge number.
In 1965, total sales of Ektacolor paper of all types was over $500,000 / year and growing. By the 90s, that figure was immense. It was being coated in 6 plants with multiple coating machines at full speed, 24/7/365. Today it is about 8/5/300 in 2 - 3 plants with most machines mothballed.
The recent sale of Health Sciences would have contributed about $2B to that figure at best.
They also went from a high of about 120,000 employees to about 30,000 WW.
PE
Eddy;
In the 90s, that sales figure was closer to $20B. And it was all film. And therein lies the problem.
PE
'Kodak has no intention of getting out of the film photography business, at least for now"
Kodak still is in the paper business. They make a lot of color paper every day!
PE
...
i called big yellow and they transfered me to 4 different people
then a PR person from the west coast called me back and said
"kodak has no intention of getting out of the photography business, not now or in the distant future"
when i asked him about paper production, he said kodak has no intention of getting out of the photography paper business either ... ,
not now or in the distant future...
within a few weeks it was announced that no more paper (b&w) would be made ...
oh well ...
...
John,
PLEASE don't even think of asking anyone at Kodak about Ektachrome!
Now, as for someone's suggestion that we should continue to support Kodak, because to do otherwise is illogical, I challenge you to sell your Honda or Toyota vehicle and purchase the most unreliable piece of Detroit sh*t-box, because to do otherwise would also be illogical. Go ahead. You first.
~Joe
I challenge you to sell your Honda or Toyota vehicle and purchase the most unreliable piece of Detroit sh*t-box, because to do otherwise would also be illogical. Go ahead. You first.
~Joe
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