Horatio
Subscriber
I agree about then vs. now. Due to the higher quanitity of higher end film bodies with removeable backs, still in use back then with comprehensive list of lenses and accessories in possession of system owner, a digital conversion back was more feasible than it is today. Now, so much of that stuff has been sold off piecemeal to a retrograde crowd interested in the 'old photography' using film, who is not as heavily invested in 'the system'. The failure of the 'silicon film' effort, IMHO, was the manner of execution by Silicon Film, rather than the concept of digital conversion of film body.
Back then, I had conceptualized a digital conversion unit, where the electronics and battery were position below the body, like the auxiliary battery grips offered for dSLRs...kind like the old accessory motorized backs for 250 exposure film magazines bulk without the canisters for the bulk roll film. I was not in the market to take my idea to reality, so the effort was never made. I certainly could see how an engineer might find some key execution issues not easily solved.
Wasn’t this what Kodak did with the first commercial pro digital camera, based on the Nikon F3? What stopped Kodak from producing better backs and sensors for film bodies?