FREE Webinar
Selling Digital Printing to the Manufacturing Industry with Frank Romano

Sponsored by Kodak
Welcome to this webinar archive. The live event was held on October 17, 2007, but you may still access the content with the resources below.
The easiest way to view the archive is to have it stream just as it did the day of the live event. Please try this option first (available for one year):
Streaming Webinar Archive
At any time and the one year streaming archive is inactive, you can still get the following downloadables:
Adobe Acrobat version of the slides (889 KB pdf)
Downloadable audio archive (6.83 MB MP3)
Questions and Answers. The following were questions not addressed during the live event.
Along with the Internet - how much do you see digital media (CD-DVD)
replacing print? Do you currently do a lot of digital / optical media?
Only Miss A does CDs and DVDs with technical content but this is a small
volume. Mr C does not do such. Both see the Internet as a repository rather
than recordable media.
How does fulfillment, print supply chain management and global distribution
figure in your choice of printers?
Both panelists do not use printers for anything other than printing at this
stage. Both are interested in exploring expanded relationships and are
beginng investigation of such.
If you have questions about this webinar, please contact Eric: eric@whattheythink.com
About Eastman Kodak Company
Kodak is the world’s foremost imaging innovator. With sales of $10.7 billion in 2006, the company is committed to a digitally oriented growth strategy focused on helping people better use meaningful images and information in their life and work. Consumers use Kodak’s system of digital and traditional products and services to take, print and share their pictures anytime, anywhere; Businesses effectively communicate with customers worldwide using KODAK solutions for prepress, conventional and digital printing and document imaging; and Creative Professionals rely on KODAK technology to uniquely tell their story through moving or still images.
More information about Kodak (NYSE: EK) is available at www.kodak.com
For more information about Kodak’s Graphic Communications Group, visit www.graphics.kodak.com. For downloading photos from Kodak’s image library, visit: www.kodak.com/go/gcg_images.
About WhatTheyThink
WhatTheyThink.com is the printing and publishing industry's leading online media organization; offering a wide range of publications delivering unbiased, real-time market intelligence, industry news, economic and trend analysis, peer-to-peer communication, and special reports on emerging technology and critical events. Serving a membership base of more than 50,000, WhatTheyThink.com also hosts webinars and live events as well as providing content through a syndication program, which delivers content directly to related websites and through RSS.
About Frank Romano
Frank Romano is Professor Emeritus, School of Print Media, Rochester Institute of Technology. He continues to teach courses at RIT and other universities and works with students on unique research projects.
Romano’s career has spanned 44 years in the printing and publishing industries. Many know him best as the editor of the International Paper Pocket Pal, or have read one of the hundreds of articles he has written for publications from North America to Europe to the Middle East, Asia and Australia. He has also consulted for major corporations, publishers, governments and other users of digital printing and publishing technology.
The author of the majority of the books that have been written on digital printing, Romano is the author of 44 books, including the 10,000-term Encyclopedia of Graphic Communications (with Richard Romano), the standard reference in the field. His books on QuarkXPress, InDesign and PDF workflow were among the first on those topics.
Romano has founded eight publications, serving as publisher or editor, including TypeWorld, then Electronic Publishing, Computer Artist, Color Publishing, The Typographer, EP&P, and both the NCPA and PrintRIT Journals. His columns appeared monthly in the Digital Printing Report since 1993.
|