| ▲ | ChrisMarshallNY 17 hours ago | |
Kodak should have ruled the digital imaging space. Instead, they collapsed. A lot of it was because the film people kneecapped the digital folks. Film was very profitable. Until it wasn't. The company that I worked for, was a classic film company. When digital was first getting a foothold (early 1990s), I used to get lectures about how film would never die...etc. A few years later, it was as if film never existed. The transition was so sudden, and so complete, that, if you blinked, you missed it. Years later, I saw the same kind of thing happen to my company, that happened to Kodak. The iPhone came out, with its embedded camera, and that basically killed the discrete point-and-shoot market, which was very profitable for my company. When the iPhone first came out, the marketing folks at my company laughed at it. Then, they stopped laughing. | ||