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myLot Discussions on Eastman Kodak Co. Camcorders
Camera help needed
Do any of my friends out there know anything about cameras? I bought a KodakEasyShare Camera last year around Christmas time. I love it. I purchased the dock and all so I can print my own photos right at home. Last week I took the camera out to take a picture and it said that I had to format the memory card. I went threw the process and it said memory card is unusable (insert new memory card). I went out and bought a new memory card and formated it and then got the same message with that memory card. I am thinking that it is something wrong with the camera~ what are the chances that I would have 2 bad memory cards. Some friends are telling me to ditch the camera and buy a new one because it will be cheaper than having someone fix it. What do you think? I am trying to contact kodak, but the online customer service is not working. If I buy a new camera, it would be the same kind since I have the dock ect for it. What would you do? Any advice is helpful.
do u like mugha_e-azam movie.....gr8 movie of that time....
Mughal-e-Azam is an Indian romance film, a product of the Bollywood movie industry. It was produced and directed by K. Asif and released in 1960. It was nine years in the making and was a lavish production for its time. Its most famous dance sequence takes place in the Sheesh Mahal (Palace of Mirrors) of the Lahore Fort, where a defiant slave-girl (played by Madhubala) dances for the Mughal Emperor and his court, singing Pyar Kiya to Darna Kya, "I have loved, so what is there to fear?" This song was one of three sequences shot on Eastman Kodak color film, while the rest of the movie was in black and white. The singing is, of course, playback singing by Lata Mangeshkar and lip-synched by Madhubala. In 2004, a colorized version of the movie was released. The movie was again a success. ve the dock ect for it. What would you do? Any advice is helpful.
I'm letting my money work for me!
Last fall, when the stock market got really bad, I decided to take advantage of that. I've never had stocks before, so I hadn't lost anything so far, but I figured the time to buy is when it's at rock bottom. So I opened an account at Sharebuilder, put $100 of my own money in and over the next couple months put all my internet earnings in. Now, I don't make a lot on the internet, it's usually just fun money for me. Between early November and late March, I put a total of $349.00 into stocks. Since I've never done this before, I really didn't know what I was doing and had to do little bit of research. I started out buying things that were really cheap - like I bought 53 shares of Circuit City for $20. That was actually my husbands idea, he said if they didn't come back it was only $20. That was the LAST time I let him pick a stock!Over the course of a few months, this is what I purchased:Circuit City $20 General Motors $10 Eastman Kodak $20 Dell $20 Playboy $10 Garmin $59 Nissan $52 Nordstoms $40 Ford Motor $118Now, today, the value of my account is $462.71, I've gained $113.16 plus been paid dividends of $.55. Now, some of my stocks are losing, but some of...
Cameras have come a long way!
No girls and boys, pictures weren't always in color and taken with digital cameras. They also didn't cost between $75 and $1000! They were actually affordable to everyone who wanted one. No, Hasselblad or the first Japanese cameras arriving at stores didn‘t cause the big photographic blast of the 1950's and ‘60's. The popular camera was made out of plastic, had a simple lens, an undefined shutter speed and undefined lens aperture setting. The big news was the Brownie camera. Actually the Brownie wasn't new on the market. In fact, the Eastman-Kodak company had been selling Brownies since 1900. Many models were popular, but it wasn't until model 127 (in 1952) that your average person could afford one. It was the time of black-and-white pictures, most of them square, as required for 4x4 cm (1.5" x 1.5") film. (There were color 127 films, but they didn't produce sufficient quality due to abysmal shutter and lens aperture precision.) But a photograph in those years was black-and-white anyway. Same as TV!Not only did the Brownie change photography, it also changed tourism. Tourists could easily be identified by that piece of Bakelite plastic hanging around their necks. The...
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Digital Camcorders