PhilBurton
Subscriber
Hi Phil, probably an idiotic question, but when you say you tried to read the files, does that mean you were able to view the entire folder structure on the disk?
I tried to read the CD using Windows 10 explorer, but I could not open up the folder containing the images. No PCD files visible.
I'm running Windows 10 also and I've just checked the Kodak Picture CDs I have from 2001. Trying to run the launcher causes my computer to have conniptions and terminate the programme, but I am able to view the contents of the disk in Windows Explorer and, while there's a folder labelled PCD there, there's another directly beneath labelled Pictures and that has my (crummy!) jpg files.
Given that my disks are older, I'd have thought the proprietary format more likely to have been in use back then and updated later to a more user friendly format. I guess not.
If I think back on Kodak's entire digital photo history, it's been one botch after another. Recall that they invented digital photography in 1975. Classic case of "Innovator's Dilemma." By the way, I worked in the disk drive industry in the early 1980s. Kodak was apparently too busy counting the profits from film and printing, and lab processing.
Yes, poor Kodak. But they did it to themselves.I also have a couple of Agfa CDs from around the same time. Not only are the scans slightly better in quality, their CD Viewer programme still runs perfectly.
Poor Kodak.![]()