No
I feel I must disargue with the notion the Kodak was somewhat lacking in how they did business. Kodak was my main supplier of certain photographic goods -- film, paper, chemicals -- for about 50 years and their goods were first class. When I toiled in a darkroom for a large international photo wire service in the 1950s, the manager switched from Kodak printing paper to something else. I told him the new stuff was okay but about 20 percent of the paper was wrinkled coming right out of the box and could not be used. I never saw a single sheet of Kodak paper with that problem. We switched back to Kodak. Plus-X. Tri-X, Super Double-X, Panatomic-X were all great films. Any great big company is going to offer or not offer goods based on if they can make a buck or not. When I was a kid everybody shopped at Mom and Pop grocery stores but in the 1950s the "big, bad" grocery chains took over. Everyone bemoaned the fact you couldn't just nod to the clerk and he would put the items on your bill and you would pay it at the end of the month and all kinds of little boutique services. Big companies are not boutiques but it seems a lot of folks want them to offer personal serrvices of stuff of interest only to them and hang the cost. It don't work that way.