Print is cheap — that's Kodak's message. The company is trumpeting its line of EasyShare inkjet printers that use cheap $10 black and $15 five-color ink cartridges. Using these cheap inks, trumpets Kodak, can cut your printing costs by half — an estimated $329 over three years.
And speaking of trumpeting, Kodak's cheaper-than-thou printers starred in a recent episode of Celebrity Apprentice (the one in which Gene Simmons got booted). But you should ignore Donald Trump's trumpeting. Be circumspect and cynical. Kodak's claims of cheap photo printing for all are true, but they're are a bit misleading. More to the point, who cares? Why, exactly, are you printing out so many photos anyway? Click Continue to find out why you shouldn't be.
I have a high regard for Kodak. I've read George Eastman's biography, visited the Eastman House in Rochester on a couple of occasions, conducted extensive interviews with Steve Sasson, the Kodak engineer who invented the digital camera in 1975, and got a chance to wander around the Eastman House vault, filled with historic camera gear. Kodak is one of the great founding American tech companies.But the consumer film business that Kodak invented and dominated for a century-plus has faded like a photo left in the sun, and the company is struggling to be profitable in the digital camera business. So Kodak is developing (pun intended) a consumer printer business that parallels George Eastman's philosophy: keep it easy and affordable and they will come.
First, these "we save big bucks" contentions are true only when Kodak's print costs are compared to the average costs of other printers. A closer reading of the data says that Kodak prints are only slighter cheaper than those produced by Canon and HP printers.
But all this is beside the point. Who prints 550 color documents a year? And what idiot prints out 150 pictures a year? And if you do, why?
Why? If I want to see my pictures, I fire up iPhoto or launch my screen saver and wax nostalgic viewing my memories on my 20-inch widescreen monitor. Or, I use AppleTV to spark teary-eyed memories on my 50-inch HDTV. If I want to share my pictures, I e-mail a link to where they're stored on some photo cloud server. Why do I need to kill trees and spend money on ink and photo paper for a tiny 4 x 6? And this whole business of longer-lasting prints… If printing is so cheap, when your old print fades, just print out another one. Talk about much ado about nothing.
So why do I have a printer? To scan, copy and fax. Printing is one of my minor multi-functions.
And CNET ranks Kodak's printers far below those from Canon and HP. In my own admittedly unscientific tests, I found documents and photos from my Canon MP830 multi-function printer more colorful than those produced by the Kodak 5100.
An old boss of mine once said there'll be a paperless office when there's a paperless bathroom. But while toilet paper is still an essential restroom accessory, there's a shrinking need for hard copies or for printers that may or may not save you pennies to produce them.
editor@dvice.com


By PhotoSci at 11:21 AM ON 02/22/08
Ever had a hard drive crash? And how are you accessing those old 5-1/4 inch floppies? And have you checked how readable the data is on some of those early writeable CDs?
Both media degredation and media obsolescence are good reasons to keep human readable copies of your images around. Yes, prints (and negatives) will fade, but the best have predicted lifetimes of well over 100 years--and you can easily tell when they are starting to go and take action.
Those who are convinced that prints are dead will likely have an unpleasant surprise sometime down the road.
By Karpet at 6:09 PM ON 02/22/08
Here here. I do DVD transfer work and I recently scanned a bunch of old photos. Some of them were 75+ years old. What are the odds that when your grandkids find an unmarked disk loaded with photos that they are going to dig out an old cd drive to look at the images? If you find an old photo you know what you have, you find an old disk and if not properly labeled, it gets pitched. Without actual prints, our photos will be lost at a staggering rate. The sad irony is that we won't find this out until long down the road.
By davelant at 1:10 AM ON 02/24/08
My screen doesn't have 1200 dpi resolution. I can't display a good image with simultaneously appropriate resolution and viewing distance on a screen. I can't cut up my screen to make a collage, or a model, a template or a stencil. I can't put it on a t-shirt. But yes, if your whole concept of photography and visual reproduction is getting misty-eyed over bad snapshots, the screen has obliterated the market for poor snapshot prints.
The printer is for people who make things.
By KAZIM at 7:26 AM ON 02/25/08
No, I'm not an idiot.
Yes, i print photos often.
No, photo printing is not dead.
You never know when your hard drive will crash, or some buggy software decides to delete your precious memories. Your first vacation with your loved one perhaps. It happened, and it bites.
I loves me printer and photo paper
By Blotto at 12:35 PM ON 03/03/08
Stewart,
Instead of referencing your own behavior, go talk to mothers of two or three kids living in the mid-West. Plenty of them still print hundreds of pictures a year.