Nokton48
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- Oct 8, 2006
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For the idiot technofetishists with a drooling obsession with 'resolution' above all else.
LOL
Quite true

For the idiot technofetishists with a drooling obsession with 'resolution' above all else.
I'm not sure either...
Gigapixel may be nice enough for those who have forgotten or never knew how suitable film has long been for large images. However, consider the hundreds of Colorama transparencies displayed in New York's Grand Central Station for decades. They were 60 feet wide, and enlarged from large and medium format film. https://montanusphotography.com/neil_montanus_bio/coloramas.htm
Have you thought about why you are so angry.For the idiot technofetishists with a drooling obsession with 'resolution' above all else.
Have you thought about why you are so angry.
Try reading the post and clicking the link.
Why so dramatic, "End of road for MF/LF" ? It would take much, much more at this point for a digital tool for
digital photographers to create the demise of large format or medium format photography. It seems short sighted
and even slightly irritating to suggest that all we analog photographers would immediately abandon our tools and passion
to jump into digital photography.
I used to be a 'digital guy', I purchased the latest and greatest Nikon as each came out, the D300 was my last. I bought the latest and greatest Apple desktop, Apeture, Adobe, had an Epson 9800 44 inch photo printer,That 'might' happen 'if... and when' digital cameras could come with the ability to apply 'swings' and 'tilts' on the lens or the 'plane' of the sensor (think 'Scheimpflug principle')...and being able to see the results 'live'. But 'somehow' it is much more 'fun' having-to or 'making' the time to work in the darkroom rather than having to sit in front of a computer screen and 'play' with that which the sensor at the back of the 'digital' hardware managed to 'capture' as 'zeros and or 'ones'.
Ken
An AI program.
You think it'll work as well as advertised? I doubt it. I'm sure it'll take multiple passes and renderings to get it to work, if at all.
I said that earlier in the thread
After about 13 or 14 hours the program is still hung at 1% up-sizing a small 6mb photo by 6x.
Ian
Congratulations for actually reading and thinking.
I used to be a 'digital guy', I purchased the latest and greatest Nikon as each came out, the D300 was my last. I bought the latest and greatest Apple desktop, Apeture, Adobe, had an Epson 9800 44 inch photo printer,
an Epson Super B format printer, color checkers, calibrators, Hanumule papers, you name it. And then on a lark I bought a Mamiya RB67 ProSD 10 years ago and have never looked back.
The time I spent on printer and paper profiles, monitor calibration, photoshop etc is amazing considering that I can develop a roll of film and make a print much better than I ever did with digital in a couple of hours.
obviously you didn't spend enough time doing the digital thing. i hate to say it, but i am a film person too, but i have been doing the digital thing not since my uncle told me film was dead in about 1988 but a handful of years after that. and while doing profiles and calibrations are a real drag, once you do them
and you make sure your printer heads aren't clogged and you didn't run out of ink and everything is good, you can make some astounding things with digital ( or film scans ) and a printer. and with modern tech, any once crappy .25x.25 300 dpi image can be ( or will soon be ) made nice on your sweet set up.
while it makes me happy, it also makes me wonder what the point of all this is..
im thinking of making smallish tintypes now because they are what they are... and there's only one... but still its mind altering technology !
I don't think this crowd can help you. Do you know a recent high school graduate?
You obviously don't know high school kids. They can only help you if the app is on their phone. They are quite ignorant when it comes to a desktop. I'm not kidding.
You obviously don't know high school kids. They can only help you if the app is on their phone. They are quite ignorant when it comes to a desktop. I'm not kidding.
This is true. Saying 'Ask a kid' for help is something out of the 90's. People marvel at infants using smartphones. Of course they can, these things are designed for idiots.
I have to agree there. I'm up to my eyeballs in experience with teenagers at the moment for what it's worth.
Haha so true![]()
Teenagers are the great hope. The next batch will probably rebel against all their parents' obsession with consumer electronics, and it will be in style to do things hands-on again.
Michael, what's to stop Stitch and the like from replacing all scanners AND from replacing today's primative camera sensors?
That's a dual-edge sword. First, stitching rarely works with any scenes with motion, then there is parallax to deal with (carefully), but most of all it just takes a lot of time, so it's impractical for most common shooting. However, if time and the inconvenience isn't an obstacle, it makes any higher MP for murals moot - you can make terrific murals with an image matrix with relatively low megapixel cameras - the more important factor becomes the quality of the optics.
Michael
Then again, I'm not shooting sports with a TLR.
Sports with a TLR would be a riot: runner takes off to the right, while I, looking into my TLR, pan left to catch him.You should, its fun...
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