• DVWhat@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    In 6 months someone is going to leak an email Kodak sent to Atari, asking where they buried the E.T. cartridges, and if there is still room in the landfill.

  • McLeavey@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    “… the camera was originally planned to sell for about US$1,000 (with a lower-priced $400 to $700 version to follow), it will now set you back $5,495…”

    You could also buy a fully functional Beaulieu cine16 camera with lenses for less than $2k and still have $3k to spend on the purchase and development of the film.

    This is only going to sell to influencers or people who have more money to waste than film making talent. Kodak, whom invented the video camera then shelved it, is a great example of how to run a multi billion dollar company into the ground with pure hubris.

  • Lunaranalog@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Long awaited? By who? Super 8 cameras are still readily available. It costs $80-100 for 3 minutes of footage. That’s why no one uses these except YouTubers.

    • apageofthedarkhold@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      In 10 minutes on kdenlive, I created a template to make any footage look like 8mm. Why would you go through the stress?

      • ILLPISSONMITCHsGRAVE@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Nostalgists who collect things like typewriters, record players, fountain pens, pinball machines, etc. They like technology that requires human interaction to function. The act of disassembling a fountain pen to clean and fill, then reassembled to use makes them happy.

        They are a niche market that likes to interact a with fidgety technology and they actually embrace the quirks of getting it to work properly. The cost isn’t necessarily a prohibition, but serves as a badge of honor amongst their peers of collectors.

        Ask someone with a Kiss Pinball machine how much they bought it for. They’ll either brag they spent way too much or they’ll tell you they got it for a song, and had to spend way too much to repair it to this pristine shape. The finding of parts and ability to fix it is part of the appeal.

        Think of people who own and showcase Model T cars, it’s the same type.

        • 22marks@alien.topB
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          11 months ago

          I own a Williams Indiana Jones pinball machine, so I felt that comment. I agree with most of what you said, but you know what this niche group doesn’t want? LCD screens and HDMI out. Kodak somehow went for the worst of both worlds at a ridiculous price.

          If they hit their original target of $1,000 then maaaybe you’d find an audience. It’s still Vision film which has gorgeous color reproduction and organic grain.