Bill, when you said,
I agree. I just find it interesting how many people feel bitterness towards Kodak and want to 'punish them' for not supporting film. Then they complain that Kodak is laying off employees. Duh.
who were you referring to?
Yes, I would rather pay more taxes for job retraining of laid off workers than spend it on a company's products to keep the company from laying off it's employees.
🙂
This
Bloomberg report said the cut back in film production will be at Kodak's production facility in
China:
During the quarter Kodak said it would close its plant making photographic paper in Rochester and cut back film-making capacity in Xiamen, China. It also is shutting a manufacturing plant it bought in its purchase of Creo Inc. in June.
Check out this report from
China Daily:
Established in 1998, Kodak's Xiamen branch has become the largest production base of imaging materials in Asia and the world's largest one-time-use camera maker.
According to statistics from the branch, the base is currently able to produce 190 million rolls of film and 90 million square meters printing paper every year. Its products are mainly exported to the Asia-Pacific area, Europe and the United States.
The last 2 Kodak Gold film cartridges that I will ever buy, are not marked "made in China" or "made in USA" . I don't have the box but I'm curious what is printed on the box.
If they're making film in China and they still can't make a profit, something is wrong with this company.
R.J.