Word: kodaks
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Consider that China is Kodak's second largest market for film and will probably be No. 1 within a year or two, says Bob Theleen, whose San Francisco-based venture-capital firm, ChinaVest, has been doing business in China for 20 years. The big story now, Theleen says, is the emerging domestic service economy that will set China apart from other Asian economies. Manufacturing, mainly for export, is well developed throughout Asia. Theleen is focusing his China investment on areas like entertainment and fast food...
...That” showcases the work of two contemporary photographers from Mali, Seydou Keïta and Malick Sidibé. Both photographers—who have lived and worked in Bamako, the capital of Mali, since the early 1950s—began their work with six by nine cm Kodak Brownie cameras. Soon they each had their own commercial photography studios in Bamako, eventually producing tens of thousands of portraits for members of Bamako’s elite...
...dusk, two days after the fourth of July, Jessie Arbogast was having a Kodak moment on the beach in Pensacola, Fla. The Gulf waves were mild, no higher than a foot and a half. His sister and the other girls had ventured out much farther, but Jessie, 8, his brothers and some cousins stayed 15 ft. from shore, crouched in the shallow surf. Then, one brother felt something swish by his leg, and Jessie saw the sharp fins of a bull shark protruding 2 ft. above the water. The shark took an exploratory bite of his arm and a chunk...
CLICK, DOCK Americans bought more than 5 million digital cameras last year, confirming their status as the gadgets du jour--like cell phones but less annoying. Unfortunately, digital cameras can still be tough on the analog-minded. That's where Kodak's new DX3500 ($379) comes in. The 2.2-megapixel digital camera has its own USB docking station; simply plug the dock into your PC, plug the camera into the dock, press a single button, and your snapshots show up on your desktop, ready for printing, uploading or e-mailing...
...typically when a company clams up--then it's "so long, comfort zone," and the stock jumps around. Last week web-design firm Macromedia forecast low visibility through the quarter, and its stock fell 22%. Others with vision problems include Ericsson, Nortel and Corning. Outside of telecom, Heidrick & Struggles, Kodak and Aetna need a stockthomologist...