SOURCE: LCD/EVF screen come on but is "snowy"
The problem is the lens is not opening, If you look into the lens you can see it is closed. This will require a trip to the repair shop.
SOURCE: LCD Not on during oicture taking
LCD cameras eat batteries... i bought dollar store batteries for one of my cameras once.... one picture per set of batteries... I recommend you purchase a good set of rechargable batteries and a charger. I actually have two sets ... one in the camera one charging. Now on to the lcd screen... you need to look thru the menu for that camera to see if the setting for the screen is off. On one of my cameras the screen is actually defective... which in some ways is good as it less of a drain on the batteries... incidentally it is a kodak as well.
Robert
SOURCE: LCD not working...
LCD needs a repair. If Oow. Repair price: 48,44 pounds
Contact KODAK:
http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=14563&pq-locale=en_US&_requestid=3490
SOURCE: lcd screen does not show what your taking picture of
Turn the camera on. Press the display button (second button down right next to the LCD (Labeled LCD/info) to turn on the LCD. Make sure you are not in review mode. Here is a link I am sure you will find helpful (its what I used to solve this problem)
http://www.kodak.com/global/en/service/publications/urg00714toc.jhtml
Let me know if this works
Cheers
Jer
SOURCE: when i turn my camera on the screen is black. when
Try downloading the picture to your computer to see if it is also black. If so, then yes it may be a shutter issue. A stuck shutter is another common failure mode for digital cameras. The symptoms of a stuck or "sticky" shutter are very similar to CCD image sensor failure. The camera may take black pictures (for shutter stuck closed), or the pictures may be very bright and overexposed, sometimes with lines, especially when taken outdoors (for shutter stuck open).
To confirm a stuck shutter, put the camera in any mode other than "Auto", and turn the flash OFF (you don't want to blind yourself for the next step). Next look down the lens and take a picture. You should see a tiny flicker in the center of the lens as the shutter opens and closes. If no movement is seen, then you likely have a stuck shutter. If so, please see this link for further info and a simple fix that may help.
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