<p>APS did have some things going for it; I found the mid-roll change feature helpful. I still have some Agfa, Fuji and Kodak APS film tucked-away in the freezer but, when it's gone, it's gone, unfortunately. I still have some Fuji F100, which I believe was the emulsion the first 35mm Reala was based on. It had finer grain than their D100. I have Nikon Pronea 6, Nikon Pronea S, Minolta Vectis S-1 and Canon EOS iX SLRs, but they're soon to be paperweights. Not that I acquired them because I thought APS was going to be successful; the writing was on the wall fairly early on after APS made its debut. I just thought they were (and still are) very cool beasts. The one thing I did find was that Fuji's first generation APS film seemed much better than Kodak's, especially the 400 ISO. The exception was Kodak's 100 ISO, which was a fine. Once Kodak improved their Advantix film, it was on par with Fuji's, if not a bit better. I want to use the cameras again, but I have mixed feelings about doing so. I guess it's my way of delaying the end.</p>