It's not about the printers, it's about the ink and paper
Kodak should have entered the ink jet market back in the early '90s (before Epson and HP), but was so attracted to thermal dye sublimation printing, they chose not to get involved with ink jet at that time.
Thermal dye sub makes GREAT looking prints, but has a high materials cost because your must use 4 (or 3 in some cases) patches of dye, even if you don't need any of a color.
Now it's cheaper to buy a whole new printer than replacement ink...
Lose money on every Sale but make it up in Volume ?
Didn't they make sensors for the Leica M8 and M9 cameras?
Yep, but Kodak sold off that division. Anything successful, sell it off.
I think they'd have had to start even earlier. I bought an HP Deskjet 500 in 1992 or so.
Sure PE, but the companies I'm talking about have (or had, when they were in one piece), dozens and dozens of fabs in the US alone, and hundreds worldwide.
It wouldn't make sense for Kodak to try to compete with them, since that market favors scale. Anyway, the PV ship sailed...straight to China.
(Just like it doesn't make sense to try and compete with Epson and HP by making $50 printers.)
Kodak should be focused on the high end sensor market, things they can do that nobody else can. Getting down in the mud on low margin products won't save the company.
And, there were inkjet printers as early as about 1988. I had a very slow Epson that made color images back then that were slow and poor. I got my second printer in 1997 and it was faster and better.
Yep, but Kodak sold off that division. Anything successful, sell it off.
The software was the challenge:
Ya, and you thought you were pretty dang fancy and technologically-advanced when your dot matrix printer had a 24-pin head, didn't you? I know I did!
As long as we have 2 or 3 color films things should be okay.
We really don't need 12 varieties from each maker.
LX;
You, of course, knew Daisey Hand best, right?
PE
The volume varies greatly depending who and what you ask. If you want to know how much one would have to invest to keep it going, it's always billions and billions in volume and no sensible investor would cough up the huge pile of money required. If you talk about film sales, it's always a few million dollars and dropping which are just generally not worth doing it anyways. I wouldn't trust any number that I read online, and the official public Kodak reports even less.I was just wondering if current film sales volume is really not suitable for old business models like Kodak and other big manufacturers.
Ya, and you thought you were pretty dang fancy and technologically-advanced when your dot matrix printer had a 24-pin head, didn't you? I know I did!
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