It was an interesting article, with a lot of thoughtful points about film and formats. I just don't see one of the main points, however. I "grew up" in Photoshop over 9 years ago, at the height of the dot-com boom. To me, back then, Photoshop was the supreme web graphics editor; it wasn't its fault that it just happened to start out life as a photo-editor. As my experience with Photoshop grew, I learned the importance of visual communication. I had been an English major in college, writing essays, reading novels, literary theory, etc. Now, I had to learn to communicate via web banners, button graphics, and the like.
As my prowess with Photoshop grew, I began to respect the photographic image. It was "source material!" That magic land where images come from, images for my new found Photoshop ninja skills of color correction, masking, layering, compositing, etc.
Years and years (and a great deal of age and wisdom) later, I came to digital photography. It was thrilling! My first digital camera, a 3 MP Kodak Point-and-shoot, was marvelous! I was used to working in terms of hundreds of pixels: now I had millions! OMGWTFBBQ! Having been forced into efficient images doing web work, in much the same way that Hemmingway picked up his writing style while working for a newspaper, I couldn't believe the VOLUMES within each image. Screw 1,000 words, it wasn't a question of words! A carefully composed picture was a unique space all unto itself.
Then I discovered B&W film, and soon after that, Efke film. I was shooting at megapixel counts barely dreamed of by digital 35mm shooters. I was buying true, advanced SLR film cameras for the same price as mid-range digital point-and-shoots! OMGWTFBBQ+SAUCE!!! 35mm B&W film, scanned or printed, is just worlds away from that 65 x 145 pixel banner I was so used to filling almost a decade ago. It was the difference between a boogie board and a Trump yacht.
So I can't conceive of a 35mm film image as a "snippet," as a mere fraction of a whole statement. I agree entirely that 35mm film is still a unique and worthwhile format; being made to wait to see what you've got puts you in a different mindset, and as much as we don't want to be labeled megapixel queens, 35mm B&W film is the most megapixels many of us can reasonably afford (unless someone would care to buy a top-of-the-line Canon DSLR for me, cuz it's so, you know, trivial to lay down $10k). Well, that's not true, I do have a couple medium format cameras, and one 4x5 I have yet to actually use. But, as far as off-the-cuff or street photography, 35mm film is awesome. And we don't even need to get into portraiture; a single frame of 35mm film, a portrait, is an encyclopedia of information on its subject.
At least, that's my point of view. I do certainly agree with the other points in the essay, though.