By design I have been not substantively posting to this thread topic, as have many other longer time members after the last major Kodak eruption. No need to rehash my personal viewpoints on the subject that most of those members have already heard, and which have not changed.
That said, however, I can't let this pass without asking in good faith...
For years now we have heard that the film operations at Kodak are in dire - if not deathly - straits. Consumer film is almost extinct. Film distribution of motion pictures is almost extinct, or trending in that direction. Medical and scientific use of film is almost exinct.
We've also been told that this seismic (disruptive technology) shift figuratively occurred in near milliseconds. Film sales dropped a gazillion percent in only a few hours in 2008. No one could have forseen it. All film manufacturers suffered deeply because of it. And the condition never subsequently mitigated. It's now the new normal. It's never going to be like it was, or even anything remotely similar.
And one of the more prominent voices behind these viewpoints has been, well, you know who...
Now you're telling us that "...the film division at EK is doing well." And that if we "abandon a working enterprise, [we] only push them into problems."
Say what?
I'm now more than a little confused. We've heard for years that we remaining film consumers are pretty much inconsequential to Kodak's bottom line, and by extension to its (digital) future. So how can our actions one way or the other "help 'kill' Kodak..."
The understanding has been that consumer film users are mere gnats on Kodak's balance sheets. And that we gnats should just suck it up, quit tilting at windmills, and recognize that fact.
Can these seeingly opposing viewpoints on Kodak's current film condition possibly be reconciled?
Ken
Interesting comments Ken;
I'm going to humbly reply (a la Georg!

)
The Kodak film division is still selling film and making a profit. This is in spite of the economy and the rest of EK. There has been a big drop in sales, but in the end there is still a profit. It all goes to digital, not back into the film division!
So, we have a problem here. The albatross of digital is hanging around the neck of the film division making things more dire than they need to be in the current situation, and you all are going to jump ship! This will only make things worse.
So, in the first quarter of 2005, film sales dropped 35%. This is more than was predicted for the entire year. Agfa failed and Ilford had to reorganize. Kodak dropped paper products and had some layoffs. In 2008, the MP industry started going to digital, and the entire economy WW went sour. EK had another drop, a rather large one.
I think that in retrospect, the film division was doing well despite all of the impediments, but OTOH, they were doing poorly because of digital. Every year the demand for film goes down and down.
So Ken, this is a replay of several posts to explain what your gazillion in 2008 really amounted to and what years that took place in. It also explains (I hope) that all things are relative.
For example, I feel great today, for my age, but if I felt this way 50 years ago, I would check into a hospital!!!!!

Understand?
PE