Author
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Topic: The death of the Photograpic Industry?
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Ian John
Junior
Posts: 20
From: United Kingdom
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted October 05, 2004 08:18 PM
Hi All,
I too, think it is sad that 35mm film manufacture is being cut down, but, press photographers of regional newspaper still use 35mm film in cameras that have a digital viewfinder screen.
I too, own a digital still camera, and, ok, its quick, instant photography, without the mess of a darkroom afterwards, but with digital, there are no negatives. In 70 years time, the generation of that day will not be able to do what I did only last week. I found some old negatives of distant family from years ago on 120 film and prossessed black and white prints from those sepia type negs,and they were real archive pictures.
Not everyone has, or are interested in having a computer, but many are interested in family photography, and I know that if those people bought a digital camera, they could get their pictures printed by one of those digital printers in Asda where you just pop the camera card into the machine and sellect what pictures you would like to print, but, at the end of the day, there are no negatives for future family members in generations to come for them to get images and prints of their past family members.
My doctor sent me to hospital for an xray a month ago, and the radiographer told me that in a few weeks time, all their xray equipment in the hospital would have been totally converted to digital, which would mean that my doctor would be able to look at my xray instantly, becuase the hospital would download it to my doctors computer. So,if this is what hospitals throughout Britain are in the throws of doing, then Kodak, or whoever manufactures the xray film will also be looking at closure some time in the future
Ian.
-------------------- Keeping 16mm Christian Films Alive.
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