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How Kodak invented the “snapshot”
AI Summary
This documentary-style video traces the history of Kodak and how it democratized photography, from the revolutionary Kodak No. 1 camera in 1888 to the affordable Brownie, and ultimately to the company's decline in the digital age. Learners will encounter vocabulary related to business, technology history, and media — such as 'roll film,' 'snapshot,' 'exposure time,' 'market share,' and 'disposable cameras' — while following a compelling narrative about innovation and disruption.
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CEFR Level
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Subtitles (87 segments)
DownloadIn 1888, the Eastman Kodak Company rolled out a new camera and a new slogan.
You press the button, we do the rest.
To say this moment revolutionized photography would be an understatement.
But this story isn't just about Kodak.
It's about what happens when a powerful technology,
originally only understood by a select few, can suddenly fit in your hand.
The photography processes developed in the mid-1800s required a mastery of chemistry,
timing, and light to achieve a successful result.
Becoming a photographer meant training on complicated equipment like big bulky cameras
loaded with glass plates coated with photosensitive chemicals.
Not to mention the expertise needed to develop images in a dark room once a photo was taken.
Professionals set up shop in photography studios and offered their specialized skill set to a paying clientele.
Getting your photo taken was often a pretty serious, rare occasion.
That is, until the Kodak No. 1 debuted.
It was a handheld box camera preloaded with a relatively new, lightweight invention, roll film.
One roll in this camera could shoot 100 photos, each cropped in a circle.
The results weren't nearly as sharp or detailed as professional equipment could produce,
but they were photos, taken for the first time by people with little or no previous knowledge of photography.
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Key Vocabulary (15)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
People refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.
A market is a specific place where people gather to buy and sell goods, often food or crafts. It can also refer to the group of people who want to buy a particular product or the general system of trade.
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