Kino
Subscriber
It's all the fault of the French...
Why do you assume that future historians will somehow be wiser than us?
If mankind is in a downward spiral of "dumbing down" then they will be even stupider. Based on the premise that digital preservation is both costly and ultimately futile, chances are that even if "future historians" do exist - they won't have any original source materials either from our times or times subsequent to research.
I remember having a conversation with a friend of mine a few years ago. She wanted to save money on film, as she tended to shoot at least one roll a film a day while on holidays. I gave her the best advice on what digital camera to purchase, but I also included the caveat that she is now entering the data management business.
"Is that something you want to do for the rest of your life? As soon as you stop, something will degrade, corrupt or otherwise render your priceless memories useless or unreadable."
Well, she didn't like the incremental expense of paying for film and development. Undeterred, she purchased a digital camera and has thousands of digital pictures of vital family events, trips and so on. Years later, she has spent hundreds and thousands of dollars to manage all of those pictures. Software, several back-up hard drives, extra storage cards, DVD-RW discs and a separate computer as well as countless hours being frustrated (I know, I'm her personal tech support line).
She now complains about of the cost of managing those files.
Preserving "analog" information on computers on a commercial scale is my day job. It's not cheap, but I'd question the figure quoted in the article. I'm slightly curious to know how they derived the figure.
Maintaining material in an unchangeble form is possible, and is standard practice in many applications, though that doesn't keep things from being changed when they are copied from the un-alterable media. However, any sound, image or document is alterable if someone has sufficient reason and skills to do it. The major difference is the tools available on computers make doing such things much easier.
For individuals, preserving our digital data comprehensively is a pretty daunting task.
-Barry
I think future historian will do the same thing as past and present ones do. LIE, oops I'm sorry i meant op-ed opinions that reflect their own personal agenda. I know my description of current events wouldn't be the same as president shrub.Why do you assume that future historians will somehow be wiser than us?
If mankind is in a downward spiral of "dumbing down" then they will be even stupider. Based on the premise that digital preservation is both costly and ultimately futile, chances are that even if "future historians" do exist - they won't have any original source materials either from our times or times subsequent to research.
I think future historian will do the same thing as past and present ones do. LIE, oops I'm sorry i meant op-ed opinions that reflect their own personal agenda. I know my description of current events wouldn't be the same as president shrub.
... only they fail to see the obvious remedy...
... will sharply reduce the overall demand for film, eventually making it a sunset market for the main manufacturers, Kodak, Fujifilm and Agfa. " (Agfa?)
I got a copy of the Academy report and it basically suggests that, for the foreseeable future, you should GO OUT TO FILM to make sure your images remain on the Planet Earth.
Radical!
This shows you about how well the average journalist is plugged in to what they write. With notable exceptions, they are now mostly regurgitators, and spinners. Frick.
Well, you are talking about a couple of decades before a transition to digital projection is complete. Until then, enjoy using film. Anyway, there will be players like Ilford who do not depend on the motion picture film market for their revenues.
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