GeneW
Veteran
No they're not dead. They're still with us. We now call them birds ...jaapv said:And then, of course, Dinosaurs are not dead
Gene
No they're not dead. They're still with us. We now call them birds ...jaapv said:And then, of course, Dinosaurs are not dead
gabrielma said:I know a number of friends that bought Kodak digital cameras (non-pro) around "the Holidays" and Canon as well.
I've seen the pictures taken with the Kodak cameras (is there a smiley for ::blech::?) Many of them returned them, some didn't care or know better (and that's something vsolanoy was referring to). The others are very happy with their choices.
I don't know anything about sales or anything about their numbers, but I wonder if they're considering "consumer satisfaction" in the equation. Brand loyalty is paramount in this business.
Fedzilla_Bob said:"Without human instruction, a picture will use its metadata to find another picture with related data and assemble into new groups based on how they relate to one another. For example, imagine being able to access every picture ever taken of your son or daughter at Christmas, whether it's part of your collection or those of relatives and friends."
Wait - has Kodak developed some form of AI? Without human instruction?
Yeah right - I think that the original instruction set will have come from someone. I also can't imagine how metadata will be spontaneously generated. Would take some awesome pattern recognition to interpret, then codify all those snapshots of fingers over lenses, so that they could all be displayed with images from fiends (intentional) and family all over the globe.
Poppycock.
dmr said:LOL, actually, I interpret this as saying they want all of the lemmings who bought digital cameras in the past so many years to junk them and go for the Latest And Greatest<tm>.
GeneW said:No they're not dead. They're still with us. We now call them birds ...
Gene
Trius said:Anyone here believe Kodak is a software company?
dmr said:LOL, actually, I interpret this as saying they want all of the lemmings who bought digital cameras in the past so many years to junk them and go for the Latest And Greatest<tm>.
KoNickon said:The concept of a camera as a separate tool is itself a "dinosaur" concept. Camera phones are the first wave of integrating two historically totally separate devices. We're moving toward an eventual "uniform communication appliance" that folds in phone, camera, internet, e-mail, computing, video and no doubt other things not yet conceived of. And, as the term "appliance" implies, there'll be less sentimental attachment to the physical piece of equipment -- trade it/discard it when the next cool item comes out. Digital cameras are merely a transitional phase. (It goes without saying that we're well along the way of moving toward the disposable and away from the "keep and repair" concept.)
Fedzilla_Bob said:Cell phones, so far, do not make for a fantastic photographic experience. By extension, I can imagine that cameras would be equally poor for making calls.
LAst two times at looking for a new cell phone the sales people seems painfully focussed on selling a phone with a camera.
Now if someone can make a decent (not the lame RokkR) cell phone, MP3, PIM device I would be very interested. So far, I haven't seen that yet.
Manufacturers have been touting convergence since around '94. More than a decade later they still haven't quite nailed it.
Brian Sweeney said:Maybe he was talking about the DCS cameras and hasn't seen any of the newer ones. "Replace film with Silicon", "Dinosaur".
Yeah, he decribed my Kodak Digital perfectly.
http://dslrexchange.com/forums/showthread.php?t=160