It's all about the cost per photo.
It's all about speculation?
This thread, not surprisingly, is chock full of varying opinions based on highly varied experiences and priorities, often emotionally charged because this crowd takes photography personally. There is some Kodak hate, some Kodak love & metric tons of speculation about the industry past, present and future, you name it, we got it!
But what there probably ought to be less of is speculation about the future of the industry presented as “facts”….because none of us work for any of the film making companies, at least that I am aware of….and the facts have not yet materialized. All this talk about scanning being a huge barrier to entry, lots of projection out of one lens of view..?…you can’t possibly expect that to apply to everyone and you will likely get more of the same responses Ranchu gave you…because you are presenting your opinion (speculation) as a fact.
Consumers who take a selfie in Peru and post it to Faceplant being a potential customer of film if companies create an infrastructure of scanning and output? I'm going to "Speculate" here and say....hell no. There are "facts" regarding what the market looks like to the makers of film, for the most part that is information rightfully held in confidence by the likes of Ilford, Kodak, Fuji, etc...
At this point, no one who uses film should take personal the corrections to product lines that will continue to morph according to the market. It’s a waste of time and energy so choose your films and methods wisely meaning that if you want to use material you think is close to getting axed, stock up and create an “exit” path to the next product you would logically use. Or, just commit to what is largely viewed as a stable method and or product and go about making photos.
The good thing about RFF is it is largely devoid of over-speculation and there is a lot of evidence that people are doing exactly the right thing with film and that is buying it, shooting it and avoiding these dead-end rants.