Kodak's Disc
Instamatic encore
The country may have gone camera crazy, all decked out in snouty lenses, fancy light meters and the designer bags needed to pack the paraphernalia. But amateur photographers using amateur equipment still get all too many amateur results. Underexposed or blurry pictures, for example, that never show up in those happy photo-equipment advertisements.
Last week Eastman Kodak Co., the world's largest supplier of photographic equipment to the multibillion dollar amateur market, took a giant step toward the elimination of misbegotten pictures. The company's solution is a compact new camera called Disc. Said Modern Photography Contributing Editor David Eisendrath after trying the photo mite: "It is virtually idiot proof."
The Disc is the most important innovation from Kodak since the Instamatic cartridge cameras of almost 20 years ago that caused a huge jump in the number of pictures taken by the average snap-shooter. Convinced that it has something to shout about, the company will push a $100 million ad blitz aimed at hitting 95% of the U.S. adult population at least 18 times by next Christmas.
Slightly larger than a cigarette case, the new camera does everything but process film. It performs a split-second analysis of distance and brightness, sets the proper exposure, activates a flash if needed and advances the film while the flash recharges. The focal length is so short 12.5 mm that everything from 4 ft. to infinity is in focus at all times, eliminating any need for a lens that turns and focuses. Two of the three new models can snap objects only 18 in. away.
Much technological wizardry went into the Disc. Unlike other consumer-oriented cameras that use optically undistinguished lenses, the Disc lens is made of four glass elements that Kodak claims are "close to theoretical perfection." The camera's electronics and flash systems are powered by a new lithium battery that lasts for 2,000 exposures, easily the life of the camera. Most revolutionary of all is the revolving film pack. The new cameras use a thin, 2½-in. -diameter plastic disc that is priced at $3.19. The disc slips into the camera's hatched back and is turned by a motor for each of its 15 exposures.
Wall Street analysts say that the new Disc system could have the same ballooning effect on film sales for Kodak as did the Instamatic. There will be competitors, but not for quite a while, say the experts, because the camera's complexity and the intricacy of its lens make it difficult to manufacture. The Disc should come in handy, too, in Kodak's battle against such alternative picture-taking methods as video cameras and Sony's filmless electronic-imaging technology. Though Kodak has no production plans now, the Disc can easily be adapted to show, say, slides over a television set.
Top Stories on Time.com
Most Popular
-
Most Read
- Will Citigroup Survive? Four Possible Scenarios
- Looking Ahead: A Bad Recession or Something Worse?
- Why Sasha and Malia Will Go to Sidwell Friends
- Why Obama Wants Hillary for His 'Team of Rivals'
- Government Jobs Looking Better in the Downturn
- Plastic Surgery Below the Belt
- Obama Picks Geithner, an Insider, for Treasury
- In Mexico's Drug War, Bad Cops Are a Mounting Problem
- Is Obama's Energy Plan Enough?
- The Breadbasket of South Korea: Madagascar
-
Most Emailed
- Will Citigroup Survive? Four Possible Scenarios
- In the Downturn, Government Jobs Looking Better
- The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Schools
- Why Sasha and Malia Will Go to Sidwell Friends
- In Mexico's Drug War, Bad Cops Are a Mounting Problem
- The Breadbasket of South Korea: Madagascar
- Looking Ahead: A Bad Recession or Something Worse?
- Tuned In - TIME.com » Blog Archive The True Demeaning of Christmas, Colbert-Style «
- TIME Cover: The New New Deal - Nov. 24, 2008
- November 22, 2008 - November 28, 2008 - Cartoons of the Week - TIME
Mixx





RSS