• An unidentified person enters Kodak Headquarters in Rochester, N.Y., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Eastman Kodak Co. said early Thursday Jan. 19, 2012 it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, as it seeks to boost its cash position and stay in business. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

    An unidentified person enters Kodak Headquarters in Rochester, N.Y., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Eastman Kodak Co. said early Thursday Jan. 19, 2012 it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, as it seeks to boost its cash position and stay in business. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

    (AP) ? Is Kodak’s moment past?

    The glory days when Eastman Kodak Co. ruled the world of film photography lasted for over a century. Then came a stunning reversal of fortune: cutthroat competition from Japanese firms in the 1980s and a seismic shift to the digital technology it pioneered but couldn’t capitalize on. Now comes a wistful worry that this icon of American business is edging toward extinction.

    Kodak filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Thursday, raising the specter that the 132-year-old trailblazer could become the most storied casualty of a digital age that has whipped up a maelstrom of economic, social and technological change.

    Already a shadow of its former self, cash-poor Kodak will now reorganize in bankruptcy court as it seeks to boost its cash position and stay in business. The Rochester, New York-based company is pinning its hopes on peddling a trove of photo patents and morphing into a new-look powerhouse built around printers and ink. Even if it succeeds, it seems unlikely to ever again resemble what its red-on-yellow K logo long stood for ? a signature brand synonymous in every corner of the planet with capturing, collecting and sharing images.

    “Kodak played a role in pretty much everyone’s life in the 20th century because it was the company we entrusted our most treasured possession to ? our memories,” said Robert Burley, a photography professor at Ryerson University in Toronto.

    Its yellow boxes of film, point-and-shoot Brownie and Instamatic cameras, and those hand-sized prints that made it possible for countless millions to freeze-frame their world “were the products used to remember ? and really define ? what that entire century looked like,” Burley said.

    “One of the interesting parts of this bankruptcy story is everyone’s saddened by it,” he continued. “There’s a kind of emotional connection to Kodak for many people. You could find that name inside every American household and, in the last five years, it’s disappeared. At the very least, digital technology will transform Kodak from a very big company to a smaller one. I think we all hope it won’t mean the end of Kodak because it still has a lot to offer.”

    Kodak has notched just one profitable year since 2004. At the end of a four-year digital makeover during which it dynamited aged factories, chopped and changed businesses and eliminated tens of thousands more jobs, it closed 2007 on a high note with net income of $676 million (?527 million).

    It soon ran smack into the recession ? and its momentum slipped into reverse.

    Years of investor alarm over whether Kodak might seek protection from its creditors crescendoed in September when it hired major restructuring law firm Jones Day as an adviser. Its stock, which topped $94 in 1997, skidded below $1 a share for the first time and, by Jan. 6, hit an all-time closing low of 37 cents. Multiple board members recently resigned, and last week the company announced that it realigned and simplified its business structure in an effort to cut costs, create shareholder value and accelerate its long-drawn-out digital transformation.

    The human toll reaches back to the 1980s when Tokyo-based Fuji, an emerging archrival, began to eat into Kodak’s fat profits with novel offerings like single-use film cameras. Beset by excessive caution and strategic stumbles, Kodak was finally forced to cut costs. Its long slide had begun.

    Mass layoffs came every few years, unraveling a cozy relationship of company and community that was perhaps unequaled in the annals of American business. Kodak has sliced its global payroll to 18,800 from a peak of 145,300 in 1988, and its hometown rolls to 7,100 from 60,400 in 1982.

    Veteran employees who dodged the well-worn ax are not alone in fearing what comes next. Some 25,000 Kodak retirees in this medium-sized city on Lake Ontario’s southern shore worry that their diminished health coverage could be clawed back further, if not disappear, in bankruptcy court.

    It’s a long cry from George Eastman’s paternalistic heyday.

    Founded by Eastman in 1880, Kodak marketed the world’s first flexible roll film in 1888 and turned photography into an overnight craze with a $1 Brownie camera in 1900. Innovation and mass production were about to put the world into cars and airplanes, the American Century was unfolding, and Kodak was ready to record it.

    “It’s one of the few companies that wiggled its way into the fabric of American life and the American family,” said Bob Volpe, 69, a 32-year employee who retired in 1998. “As someone at Kodak once said, ‘We put chemicals in one end so our customers can get memories out the other.’”

    Intent on keeping his work force happy ? they never organized a union ? Eastman helped pioneer profit-sharing and, in 1912, began dispensing a generous wage dividend. Going to work for Kodak ? “taking the life sentence,” as it was called ? became a bountiful rite of passage for generations.

    “Most of the people who worked at Kodak had a middle-class life without a college education,” Volpe said. “Those jobs paid so well, they could buy a boat, two cars, a summer place, and send their kids to college.”

    Propelled by Eastman’s marketing genius, the “Great Yellow Father” held a virtual monopoly of the U.S. photographic industry by 1927. But long after Eastman was stricken with a degenerative spinal disorder and took his own life in 1932, Kodak retained its mighty perch with a succession of magical innovations.

    Foremost was Kodachrome, a slide and motion-picture film extolled for 74 years until its demise in 2009 for its sharpness, archival durability and vibrant hues. In the 1960s, easy-load Instamatic 126 became one of the most popular cameras ever, practically replacing old box cameras. In 1975, engineer Steven Sasson created the first digital camera, a toaster-size prototype capturing black-and-white images at a resolution of 0.1 megapixels.

    Through the 1990s, Kodak splurged $4 billion on developing the photo technology inside most cellphones and digital devices. But a reluctance to ease its heavy reliance on film allowed rivals like Canon Inc. and Sony Corp. to rush largely unhindered into the fast-emerging digital arena. The immensely lucrative analog business Kodak worried about undermining too soon was virtually erased in a decade by the filmless photography it invented.

    “If you’re not willing to cannibalize yourself, others will do it for you,” said Mark Zupan, dean of the University of Rochester’s business school. “Technology is changing ever more rapidly, the world’s becoming more globalized, so to stay at the top of your game is getting increasingly harder.”

    In November, Kodak warned it could run out of cash in a year if it didn’t sell 1,100 digital-imaging patents it’s been shopping around since July. Analysts estimate they could fetch at least $2 billion (?1.55 billion).

    In the meantime, Kodak has focused its future on new lines of inkjet printers that it says are on the verge of turning a profit. It expects printers, software and packaging to produce more than twice as much revenue by 2013 and account by then for 25 percent of the company’s total revenue, or nearly $2 billion (?1.54 billion).

    CEO Antonio Perez said in a statement Thursday that the bankruptcy filing is “a necessary step and the right thing to do for the future of Kodak.” The company has secured $950 million in financing from Citigroup Inc., and expects to be able to operate its business during bankruptcy reorganization and pay employees.

    On its website, Kodak assured customers that the nearly $1 billion (?770 million) in debtor-in-possession financing would be sufficient to pay vendors, suppliers and other business partners in full for goods and services going forward. The bankruptcy filing in the Southern District of New York does not involve Kodak’s international operations.

    “To be able to hop from stone to stone across the stream takes great agility and foresight and passion for excellence, and Kodak is capable of that. They have some killer stuff in inkjet printing. It’s becoming a profitable product line but what they need is the runway to allow it to take off,” Zupan said. “As the saying goes, ‘the best way to anticipate the future is to invent it.’”

    The company and its board are being advised by Lazard, FTI Consulting Inc. and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP. Dominic DiNapoli, vice chairman of FTI Consulting, will serve as chief restructuring officer. Kodak expects to complete its U.S.-based restructuring during 2013.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-01-19-Kodak’s%20Legacy/id-f3c2a2918ce44b29a4d319624ffe62fb

    calvin johnson patsy cline portlandia detroit lions pierre thomas beyonce gives birth playoffs

  • Streaming video over the Internet is one of the most important telecommunication developments in the last decade. Problem is, doing so needs a massive system architecture to support it and the feed is often riddled with lag. A new protocol from BitTorret’s founder is aiming to change all that. More »


    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/8QfwXP3DwHY/bittorrents-new-p2p-protocol-could-fix-the-internets-shoddy-streaming-video-quality

    warrior novak djokovic sarah mclachlan shakespeare bipolar symptoms qi osama bin laden

  • LONDON ? British scientists have found scores of fossils the great evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin and his peers collected but that had been lost for more than 150 years.

    Dr. Howard Falcon-Lang, a paleontologist at Royal Holloway, University of London, said Tuesday that he stumbled upon the glass slides containing the fossils in an old wooden cabinet that had been shoved in a “gloomy corner” of the massive, drafty British Geological Survey.

    Using a flashlight to peer into the drawers and hold up a slide, Falcon-Lang saw one of the first specimens he had picked up was labeled ‘C. Darwin Esq.”

    “It took me a while just to convince myself that it was Darwin’s signature on the slide,” the paleontologist said, adding he soon realized it was a “quite important and overlooked” specimen.

    He described the feeling of seeing that famous signature as “a heart in your mouth situation,” saying he wondering “Goodness, what have I discovered!”

    Falcon-Lang’s find was a collection of 314 slides of specimens collected by Darwin and other members of his inner circle, including John Hooker ? a botanist and dear friend of Darwin ? and the Rev. John Henslow, Darwin’s mentor at Cambridge, whose daughter later married Hooker.

    The first slide pulled out of the dusty corner at the British Geological Survey turned out to be one of the specimens collected by Darwin during his famous expedition on the HMS Beagle, which changed the young Cambridge graduate’s career and laid the foundation for his subsequent work on evolution.

    Falcon-Lang said the unearthed fossils ? lost for 165 years ? show there is more to learn from a period of history scientists thought they knew well.

    “To find a treasure trove of lost Darwin specimens from the Beagle voyage is just extraordinary,” Falcon-Lang added. “We can see there’s more to learn. There are a lot of very, very significant fossils in there that we didn’t know existed.”

    He said one of the most “bizarre” slides came from Hooker’s collection ? a specimen of prototaxites, a 400 million-year-old tree-sized fungus.

    Hooker had assembled the collection of slides while briefly working for the British Geological Survey in 1846, according to Royal Holloway, University of London.

    The slides ? “stunning works of art,” according to Falcon-Lang ? contain bits of fossil wood and plants ground into thin sheets and affixed to glass in order to be studied under microscopes. Some of the slides are half a foot long (15 centimeters), “great big chunks of glass,” Falcon-Lang said.

    “How these things got overlooked for so long is a bit of a mystery itself,” he mused, speculating that perhaps it was because Darwin was not widely known in 1846 so the collection might not have been given “the proper curatorial care.”

    Royal Holloway, University of London said the fossils were ‘lost’ because Hooker failed to number them in the formal “specimen register” before setting out on an expedition to the Himalayas. In 1851, the “unregistered” fossils were moved to the Museum of Practical Geology in Piccadilly before being transferred to the South Kensington’s Geological Museum in 1935 and then to the British Geological Survey’s headquarters near Nottingham 50 years later, the university said.

    The discovery was made in April, but it has taken “a long time” to figure out the provenance of the slides and photograph all of them, Falcon-Lang said. The slides have now been photographed and will be made available to the public through a new online museum exhibit opening Tuesday.

    Falcon-Lang expects great scientific papers to emerge from the discovery.

    “There are some real gems in this collection that are going to contribute to ongoing science.”

    Dr. John Ludden, executive director of the Geological Survey, called the find a “remarkable” discovery.

    “It really makes one wonder what else might be hiding in our collections,” he said.

    ____

    Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

    ____

    Online:

    http://www.bgs.ac.uk/discoveringGeology/geologyOfBritain/archives/jdhooker/home.html

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120117/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_darwin_fossils

    miguel cotto cotto ncaa bowl games bowls brooke mueller herman cain harry potter and the half blood prince

various seasonality reads

‘Black gold’ raises the stakes over Falklands

[ [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], ‘http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj’, ‘[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]‘, ‘ ‘, ’630′, ‘ ‘, ‘ ‘, ], [ [['Afghan security forces and police killed three', 3]], ‘http://yhoo.it/H9BcJE’, ‘[Related: Bales\' wife on his alleged shooting: \'He would not do that\']‘, ‘ ‘, ’630′, [...]

Obama urges parties to reach deal to avert default

A sign for the Social Security Administration is seen in Los Angeles, Friday, July 29, 2011. If the debt ceiling currently being debated in Congress does not rise, the government would need to choose what to pay and what not, including benefits like Social Security. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles) A sign for the Social Security Administration [...]

CMA Awards 2011: Full List of Winners!

The 2011 CMA Awards featured plenty of familiar faces as winners. Newlyweds Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert took home a pair of awards on Wednesday night, for male and female vocalist of the year, respectively. “Congrats to my hubby too,” Lambert said in her acceptance speech and, addressing her loving husband: “It’s gonna be a [...]

World Bank says Africa making business easier

SINGAPORE (AP) ? Most Sub-Saharan countries made doing business easier over the past year, but the African region is still the costliest and most complex in the world for entrepreneurs, the World Bank said in a report Thursday. In its annual ranking of 183 countries, the bank found 36 of 46 Sub-Saharan African nations improved [...]

UTHealth student earns fellowships to research major source of bacterial infections

Public release date: 20-Sep-2011[ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Rob CahillRobert.Cahill@uth.tmc.edu713-500-3030University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston A doctoral student at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) has been awarded two research fellowships to study the spread of E. coli, a hard-to-treat bacterium that can lead to food poisoning. [...]