Defended their top-of-the-line film imaging technology (see Sal's post above), marketing it as the higher quality option for discriminating photographers, while they concurrently worked to improve and control their newer digital imaging technology (again, see Sal above) and carefully blended it into their analog product lines as more appropriate for the birthday candles crowd.
As someone that worked in the equipment design part of Kodak, I can 100% say that the story described above and by Sal is how things worked for a while. Where PE and Prof Pixel worked in the research labs, things may have been quite different, IDK. But where I was we actively pursued and patented digital technologies - some that took advantage of film and some that did not. There was very much a sense of urgency to develop digital technologies before Fuji, and to a somewhat lesser extent Agfa, 3M, GE and IBM, developed and patented them. Fuji had screwed us in the patent wars and we were doing anything we could to gain back ground. This was 1984 to 1988 and I worked in Medical Imaging.
In 1989 there was a sea change as one CEO and his team were ousted and another took over. A conscious, corporate edict was handed down that everything was to be about film. We were to maximize film production, profits and usage. For us, the marching orders were simple: "If it eats film, we like it. If it doesn't eat film but makes money, we might think about it. If it has nothing to do with film, we aren't interested." Project teams I had worked with for years evaporated overnight. A medical instrument division in the same building with us was hastily sold to Johnson & Johnson - never mind that that same J&J unit is still (AFAIK) manufacturing profitably in Eastman Business Park.
The was all done in the name of "Concentrating on Core Strengths and Technologies". It was done to try and make Wall Street happier. Corporations all around the USA were doing the same thing and for the same reason. It was a fad and all those groups spun off by many outfits were happily snapped up by foreign competition who developed them and laughed as the profits rolled in.
"Concentrating on Core Strengths and Technologies" is still a phrase that solidifies like an icy lead ball in my stomach every time I hear it.
Had that critical 1989 change not been made in a bid to make the analysts happy - which you cannot do, they are never happy - things COULD have been very different for EK. It was a choice they made.
I'm out.