Kodak EasyShare is a sub brand of Eastman Kodak Company products identifying a consumer photography system of digital cameras, snapshot thermal printers, snapshot thermal printer docks, all-in-one inkjet printers, accessories, camera docks, software, and online print services. The brand was introduced in 2001. The brand is no longer applied to all-in-one inkjet printers (now branded "ESP") or online printing services (now simply "Kodak Gallery"). Thermal snapshot printers and printer docks product lines have been discontinued. In 2012, Kodak stopped manufacturing and selling all digital cameras and photo frames.[1]
Kodak digital camera software
The Z-series[3] was Kodak's high-zoom and performance-oriented range of consumer digital cameras, replacing the original DX series. Typically, Z-Series cameras have higher optical zooms than any other series. The highest optical zoom camera offered by Kodak was the Z990[4] with a 30X Optical Zoom.
The V-Series was another style-oriented range of consumer digital cameras, replacing the original LS series. V-Series had a number of innovations, such as dual-lens technology, first introduced with the V570. The V-Series line was superseded by higher-end M-Series cameras.
Kodak EasyShare software[13] is used to transfer and catalog images from EasyShare camera models and can also be used with existing images (in .gif, .png, .jpg, or .tiff format) and non-Kodak digital cameras. The most recent version of Kodak EasyShare software is version 8.3, which includes support for Windows 7. Included in the latest versions is the ability to upload pictures and videos to Facebook, YouTube and Kodak Gallery. Other features include the ability to rate, tag, and caption pictures (using industry tagging standards on the files themselves), online print ordering facilities, photo enhancement and alteration capabilities, and home printing page layout control.
The built-in Microsoft Windows Update service may not update your drivers properly. Instead, use The Camera Driver Update Utility for Kodak. It is intelligent software that automatically recognizes your computer's operating system and camera manufacturer and model to find the most up-to-date drivers for it. There is no risk of installing the wrong driver. The Camera Driver Update Utility downloads and installs your drivers quickly and easily.
This article has everything you need to know and perform data recovery from Kodak cameras or storage devices with absolute ease.Download the Remo Kodak Photo Recovery Tool to flawlessly recover deleted or lost photos of any file format and file type from any Kodak digital camera or storage devices with just a few simple clicks.
Remo Recover Media edition, also known as Remo Photo Recovery software can help you to recover your lost photos from Kodak cameras like Easyshare or DC. The software supports the recovery of RAW photo files on Kodak cameras like KDC, K25, and DCR. It can retrieve images from various memory cards like memory sticks, SD, XD, CF, MMC, etc. The unique built-in algorithm performs a thorough scan of the memory scan and restores all the lost photos.
Almost as easy to use as its name implies, the Kodak EasyShare software (free) provides consumer-level tools for organizing, sorting, editing, and using your photos in a variety of ways. Though it is designed specifically to work with Kodak cameras and printers (and is supplied with most Kodak hardware), anyone can download it at no cost and use it with any camera or printer.
In 1997, another French-born inventor, Philippe Kann, was in the hospital in Santa Cruz, CA, because his wife was getting ready to deliver their daughter. He had a digital camera and intended to upload photos of the newborn to his computer, then email them to friends and family. But Philippe (whom I've known for going on 35 years, because he founded an early PC software company) is not a patient man. He also had a cellphone, and he wondered why he couldn't just send the photos via the phone from the hospital. So, he did.
Despite the legacy of the industry and Kodak's best efforts to protect its profits, there was no need for film, chemicals or paper, nor for all those one-hour kiosks that processed film and produced prints. There wasn't even a need for a separate camera, because the lens and some related transistors and software could be embedded in a phone (or almost anything else) at a cost of a dollar or two.
Anybody born before the mid 1990s will likely remember film cameras being used to document their early years. Although the convenience of digital cameras took over and were then themselves largely usurped by mobile phones, there is still a surprising variety of photographic film being produced. Despite the long pedigree, how many of us really know what goes into making what is a surprisingly complex and exacting product? [Destin] from SmarterEveryDay has been to Rochester, NY to find out for himself and you can see the second in a series of three hour-long videos shedding light on what is normally the strictly lights-out operation of film-coating. 2ff7e9595c
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