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Edited on Thu Jun-23-05 09:31 PM by HypnoToad
are you implying that 35mm processing, et al, is about to go bye-bye in favor of digital?
Then they'd better perfect the sensor technology and get those toy cameras down in price first. :D $1000 for a 6MP D-SLR camera is asinine when 100ISO slide film delivers 24MP quality... never mind how the majority of print publications STILL won't take digital... and how film is still rather better at capturing shadow detail properly.
Besides, most print publication still deal in film only.
There are also legal issues; no court in their right mind should allow a digital photo to be used as evidence; only a film negative - hard copy evidence that can't be tinkered with.
I am aware of digital's (D-SLR's anyway) advantages (particularly the lack of grain for higher ISO numbers) and I also know that most print developers don't give a fritter and screw up overexposing the print itself.
I dunno. But the price/quality issue of digital has GOT to be resolved first. I will not pay $3000 for a camera that requires me to take approximately 9100 exposures to make up for the cost. (at 33 cents per exposure; covering both cost of film and processing prints; I get 36 exposure film for $6 and it costs $6 for me to have it processed. $12 divided by 36 exposures is 33 cents each. (meanwhile, any store will make prints of digital files for 25 cents each. Big savings for the consumer? $2.88 if they process 36 exposures. And consumers often use those $300 piece of trash cameras. Might be perfect for them, but prosumers like me often get to pay up the slack and we ain't rich either.
I also laugh when I see "the masses" go out to take photos. They just point, shoot, and drool. Not realizing that it's broad daylight and they've got the flash on... or for fireworks photos, the nit-wits use the flash, so you know the exposure settings they haven't even begun to properly set will only be a waste of their time in the end. :eyes: And when they're near me and I'm trying to shoot fireworks/nighttime, you bet I'm going to open my flap. I don't want their flash ruining a shot I'm taking (you'd think a person would look up rudimentary photography first! Learning is one thing, but everybody sells little $3 pamphlets, most of them hype digital in ways I could readily respond to their inaccuracies on...)
On the plus side, I don't think any of us is long for this world anyway. Too many people and too few resources and too many madmen who never learned how to govern are in power. * is bound to upset China, N Korea, Iran, the EU, Russia, or any number of countries sooner rather than later and a DU post somewhere postulated that we'd have a nuke war within 5 years.
The film prices I used above were for my typical film (Fuji Reala 100.) Provia slide film is $11+$4 processing = $15 for a 36 exp roll (42 cents each exposure). This means I'd have to take over 7100 snaps to make the price.
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