DP Review Thursday August 21, 2025
Just over two weeks after retailers announced price increases for many of Fujifilm's products in the US, the company itself has issued a statement saying it will "further adjust prices" in light of "volatile market conditions.” The new pricing will go into effect on August 30. Fujifilm hasn't said publicly how many products will be impacted, but DP Review reports that the price hikes will affect most of its lineup, with two notable exceptions: the recently released X half and the X-E5. The difficult-to-get X100 VI will be affected by the price changes, so retailers will have to decide how they handle people who placed their order prior to the price increases.
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David Schonauer Thursday August 21, 2025
"In Los Angeles, what do you see when you are not moving at 60 mph?" That question, notes publisher GOST, lies at the center of Iranian American photographer Ayda Gragossian's book "North North
South." Between 2019 and 2023, Gragossian wandered on foot through different areas of a "constantly shifting, fragmented city with a landscape that is both navigated and determined by the car," adds … Read the full Story >>
Barron’s Wednesday August 20, 2025
As we noted recently, Eastman Kodak warned investors of pending financial troubles due to debt obligations—though it later said press reports of its imminent demise were misleading. “There is a lesson here for incumbents in the age of AI: It’s hard to know where the competition is coming from during an inflection point like today. Kodak thought it was in a race with Canon and Nikon, when it was Apple, Samsung and Alphabet’s Google that ultimately passed all three,” notes Adam Levine at Barron’s.
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HYPERALLERGIC Wednesday August 20, 2025
New York City is defined in many ways by its iconic infrastructure, from its bridges to it roadways, but one of the city’s most awe-inspiring pieces of infrastructure, its water system, is little seen and under-appreciated, notes Hyperallergic, which spotlights photographer Stanley Greenberg’s epic, decade-long study of how New Yorkers get their H2O. Greenberg’s book Waterworks: The Hidden Water System of New York, originally published in 2003, has been re-issued and expanded.
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