Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]That's still NOT big bucks. 65,000 images at 200KB each would fill exactly 20 CD-R discs, with 3,250 images fitting on each disc. You can buy a blank CD-R (in quantity) for under $2.00. This comes out to be a total expense of $40 every time you want to duplicate your entire set, and this fugure would increase by $2.00 every time you add another 3,250 images to your portfolio. Average the CD cost over 5 years and it costs you $8 per annum. Of course, you need a CD-R burner, which can be had nowadays for $200. Average it over a 5 year period and it costs you $40 per year. This is a total cost of $48 annually to maintain your digital archive. If we can afford Leica, we can afford $4 a month to archive images, n'est-ce pas? Francesco Sanfilippo fls@san.rr.com Webmaster, System Administrator, http://www.photorealm.com/ http://www.glossymedia.com/ - ----- Original Message ----- From: Jonathan Borden <jborden@mediaone.net> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 1999 2:28 PM Subject: Re: [Leica] Big bucks > Mike Johnston wrote: > > >>>Worried about the longevity of the CD? So copy it every couple of > > years. > > We're not talking big bucks here.<<< > > > > > > Oh yes we are. I've made over 65,000 negatives in my life, and I'm only > > 42. (And not even a terribly heavy shooter.) > > > > --Mike > > > One of the great things about Leica equipment is that nothing becomes > obsolete. This is in stark distinction to digital electronic equipment which > is designed to become obsolete in "Internet time". In my mind, Leica is the > direct opposite to digital. Canon is where digital is at (and there are also > many great things about being digital). It is no big deal to change your > lens mount every few years because you plan to buy a completely new system > every few years regardless. So the two cameras which spend the most time > sitting on my shelf are my Canon F-1 and my Sony Mavica, the F-1 because it > is sooo much louder than the EOS and has no real benefit except that it does > work without batteries (but I already have my M6 for that purpose :-) And > the Mavica which serves its only purpose when I need to e-mail pictures to > someone, or if I am giving a talk and I need to digitize something onto my > laptop (so it is really the combo of a Polaroid and a compact scanner). > > Even though CDs are somewhat cheap (say $1-2) for writeable, that's not > the point. Who wants to deal with figuring out what to rewrite? I just had a > terrific ciba print made of a 15 year old kodachrome discovered at the > bottom of a box! In the same box is a large computer tape I have no idea of > how to deal with. oh sure I *could* find a VAX somewhere and transfer it > onto a CD but who wants to deal with that. The chrome is usable in the same > format as on the day it was created. The Omega D2 enlarger I use is probably > 25 years old and still uses the same format lightbulbs. > > Jonathan Borden > > >