Kodak’s
new logo was nowhere to be seen at the
company’s CES booth, no doubt because the branding was unveiled after the show opened (though we can’t help but think
that any company serious about its image would have gremlins updating the booth while the rest of us sleep to bring it
up-to-date). Also missing — or a least playing a secondary role — were Kodak’s cameras. The focus was very
much on what consumers can do with photos once they’re taken, rather than on taking the pics themselves.
new logo was nowhere to be seen at the
company’s CES booth, no doubt because the branding was unveiled after the show opened (though we can’t help but think
that any company serious about its image would have gremlins updating the booth while the rest of us sleep to bring it
up-to-date). Also missing — or a least playing a secondary role — were Kodak’s cameras. The focus was very
much on what consumers can do with photos once they’re taken, rather than on taking the pics themselves.

Using an Xbox 360 to display a Kodak image gallery.
The latest version of Kodak’s drugstore printing
kiosk, which supports Bluetooth and IR for quick printing from cameraphones. Crowds were lined up at CES to get free
prints out of this one.
Kodak’s vision of the perfect home, with
wall-to-wall pics, and two fridges to provide enough space for those not worthy of wallspace.
Piles of
prints.
One of the few Vegas-themed booth events. Kodak’s Hold
‘Em table let visitors play to win Kodak products.
Ah ha! So, Kodak does still make
cameras!