Where did I say that art is "better" today than it was "back in the day"? I didn't. I just said why judge. Do whatcha like a d call it a day.....I just disagree that removing the lake of fire results in a higher net gain.
Okay so are you saying that photography is better off now that digital is mainstream? I wasn't aware cameras, a tool for visual ART and EXPRESSION, were the same as computers.
This has happened to me so often that I no longer read comments: many an enjoyable and engaging article has been ruined by the comments. I wonder if there's a way for firefox to block them...
I guess I see what I do (programming/analytics/bi) as art and science.
My idol btw one'a my professors declared that programming is 50% science and 50% art).....
Just remember back in the day, mainframe time was hundreds of dollars an hour....a computer these days is free (eg library)....a 8x10 = mainframe and Nikon Dx = library PC.....
Just tools....
Someone can write some great code in vi or notepad at the library......
Ah but one important point you leave out in the analogy: quality of code. The ultimate equalizers != net higher quality of code. That's the entire point I'm making.
You can hand cameras and computers to monkeys, you know what happens after that.
My idol btw one'a my professors declared that programming is 50% science and 50% art).....
Wow. Great article. Thanks for posting.
Particularly insightful passage:
"Instagram may have only had 13 employees on the books, but really it has more than 100 million people who work for the company, providing immense amounts of personal information and location metadata. Instagram users' pathetic and narcissistic freakout in December over copyright terms, as if anyone wanted to sell your cat photos in the first place, totally missed the point. The value of any photo is pretty much nil, as professional photographers have learned to their dismay. Only the data attached to them, which you give away in every social media app's terms of service, have real value."
Forgive my stupidity but how does that data translate into profit?
Thinking people (and this includes thinking photographers) haven't disappeared, they have just distanced themselves (or have been forced to distance themselves) from the hoard. Creativity hasn't 'gone down' as the author reckons, there's just a bigger gulf now between true creatives and self-marketing posers. We all like to think of ourselves as special these days (thanks to reality TV and "you're worth it" style mass advertising). The result is, we aren't discerning enough anymore when it comes to 'the gifted' - because questioning average Joe's actual talent, ability and value ultimately means you have to question your own - and that kind of existential crisis is something we all want to avoid.
This is the price we have paid for gaining some resemblance of 'equality'. Let's all be special together!
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