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While panoramic cameras had been developed as early as Friedrich Martens' construction of his Megaskop-Kamera in 1845, [1] they became broadly accessible only in the 1890s, a major obstacle was the use of flat glass plates being incompatible with the design of such cameras (though Martens devised curved Daguerreotype plates in his camera with a rotating lens, their display is made difficult by ...
Eastman Chemical Company is an American company primarily involved in the chemical industry. Once a subsidiary of Kodak , [ 2 ] today it is an independent global specialty materials company that produces a broad range of advanced materials, chemicals and fibers for everyday purposes.
Imaging for Windows was developed by Wang (as in Windows 95/NT 4.0), was later absorbed by Kodak [2] (as Eastman Software, as in Windows 98/2000), then becoming eiStream Inc., later to be renamed to Global 360. Currently Imaging for Windows 4.0 is available through OpenText. [3]
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This is a hot version of E-4 and similar to ME-4 for Ektachrome motion picture film. E-6 was made available to the public in 1975, but only the pro films were available at the time. There were some color stability ("keeping") issues to verify before the amateur films could be released. E-7 is the "mix-it-yourself" version of E-6.
Originally, all Eastman Color films, ECN and ECP alike, were on triacetate base (no Eastman Color films were ever made on nitrate base), but recent practice has been for ECN elements to be on triacetate base, so these may be easily spliceable (using lap-type cemented splices, also called "negative assembly" splices), and for ECP elements to be ...
Ansco purchased the patent in 1900 and sued Kodak for infringement. Kodak ultimately lost the suit, which lasted over a decade and cost the company $5 Million. [20] [21] Eastman paid close attention to Kodak's advertisements. He coined the slogan, “You press the button, we do the rest”, which became ubiquitous in the general public. [22]