Kodak set to quit
camera film and photo paper business

Professional
photographers still value the unique feel that film gives to their pictures
Debt-struck photography pioneer Kodak says it
may sell off its still-camera film and photo paper divisions.
The firm has already stopped making digital
cameras as part of efforts to reduce its losses after filing for bankruptcy
protection in January.
It has also been trying to raise funds by
selling off more than 1,100 digital imaging patents.
It had originally planned to announce a buyer
last week, but said "discussions continue" and a deal might not
happen.
Apple and Google had been reported to have
made rival bids for the patents, but the Wall Street Journal reports they have now
joined forces and have added Samsung, LG, HTC and others to
their consortium
The WSJ's sources suggested the offer price
for the portfolio would be about $500m (£315m) - well below the $2.6bn estimate
that Kodak had suggested it could be worth.
The company recently reported a $665m net loss
for the first six months of the year, putting further pressure on
its finances.
Film's
feel
In its latest
announcement the US company said it had hired investment bank
Lazard to help it sell its Personalised Imaging and Document Imaging
businesses.
This would mean an end to it making films for
still cameras, photo papers, souvenir photo products at theme parks, scanners
and picture print-out kiosks at stores.
It would leave the business focused on
printers, cinema film stock and chemicals.
The British Journal of Photography said the
news would concern the industry.
"A lot of professionals still shoot with
film and like the quality it gives them," Olivier Laurent, news editor at
the journal, told the BBC.
"The resolution is still a thousand times
higher than most digital cameras can offer so long as a good scanner is used.
"A film photograph has
a different mood thanks to its grain - it's about the love of the image and
digital still has a hard time trying to reproduce that feeling.
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