Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/07/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I'm glad it was a humble opinion because it's also wrong, especially with regard to the camera sensor description. If the camera sensor kept the incoming photon energy and then sent out an electrical signal proportional (in some way) to that energy it would be an analog system. Military night-vision goggles used to work this way, probably still do. But digital cameras take the charge collected in the sensor and convert the amount of energy held in each cell into a digital measurement of the signal - crossing the line from the analog to the digital domain. At that point the image can be copied exactly without changing it's nature - it's been changed once by the conversion process from analog to digital. After that: it's all 1's and 0's. The signal that goes to the inkjet printer is, of course a digital representation of the image that entered the software required to transform the RGB -> CMYK and then to whatever the printer needs in order to run its tiny droplets of ink out the nozzles. That's all in the digital domain. There is some analog operation going on somewhere in the printer, I'm thinking, but I don't know where or even have an inkling of how it works. Film isn't digital, of course. On Wed, 14 Jul 2004 10:52:51 -0400, buzz.hausner@verizon.net <buzz.hausner@verizon.net> wrote: > Humble, B.D.? HUMBLE!?!? <<INSERT SMILEY HERE>> Anyway, the words > "analog[ue]" and "digital" are still being used wrong and dtand to be > corrected. > > Buzz > > > > From: "B. D. Colen" <bdcolen@earthlink.net> > > Date: 2004/07/14 Wed AM 10:47:06 EDT > > To: "'Leica Users Group'" <lug@leica-users.org> > > Subject: RE: [Leica] Analog v. Digital > > > > Ah, here we go, wandering off down the Yellow LUGroad. > > > > Digital smidgital - I would submit that what we're really talking about > > is electronic image capture v. film image capture: using the first > > process the image - light - passes through the lens, strikes an > > electronic sensor, and is converted to electrical impulses and stored > > electronically; using the second, the image, light, passes through the > > lens and strikes and exposes a piece of film, creating what will become > > a negative of the image - or a positive in the case of a slide, and is > > "stored" on the film itself. > > > > And "digital" printing is, of course, either inkjet printing, dye > > sublimation, or some other specific form of printing that converts the > > electronic impulses captured by the camera to colors on paper. > > > > But someone, at some point, decided that "electronic" was pass? and > > oh-so-50s, and that "digital" was a more marketable term, and, besides, > > it was one people could come to understand in terms of watches and > > clocks - digital is modern and up-to-date, analogue is old-fashioned and > > stodgy. > > > > JustMHO.... :-) > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >