Kodak's Bankruptcy Reorganization Approved
Will become a commercial printing company that no longer sells to consumers
Eastman Kodak Co., which dominated the photography industry before being hobbled by digital competition, won court approval of a plan to exit bankruptcy as a commercial printing company that sells nothing to consumers.
The plan, which cuts about $4.1 billion of debt, was approved today by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Allan Gropper in Manhattan. It affirms Kodak's move away from cameras, film sales and consumer photo developing, which made it a household name, to focus on printing technology for corporate customers.
"Kodak is one of the best-known names of American business," Gropper said today. "Its decline in bankruptcy is a tragedy of American economic life."
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"Kodak is one of the best-known names of American business," Gropper said today. "Its decline in bankruptcy is a tragedy of American economic life."
Nope. They just didn't change.
Remember Ampex? They thought they were in the recording tape business and almost went away until someone in the company pointed out that they were in the data storage business.