Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The big problem with an all digital system is the lack of a safe long term storage standard. I just cleaned out my wife's grandmother's house and found quite a number of old pictures in various states of deterioration but all the black and white negatives and Kodachrome slides were just fine. I can easily scan them and produce new prints. I also expect that in fifty years, as I slowly return from whence I came, my children's children will still be able to do the same. I cannot speak with the same hope about past or present electronic media. The technology to read older formats has been past by and the machines to do the work are failing and being scrapped. Most people on this list are like me in that we will not go to the extraordinary efforts necessary to keep our digital storage safe, stable or current. The intermediate step of producing an analogue negative or positive will ensure that our pictures will be easily accessible to future generations. John Collier > From: "Dan Honemann" <danh@selectsa.com> > > There is one other hope--a compromise, to be sure: that the film scanners > will keep pace with the digital CCD's. It's a silly middle step to have to > make, however.