Most likely, yes. I was being kind of facetious.
You can hear the magic thinking implied in the video. Variations on “But it’s a real scanner” is often heard from such persons.
The other classic is “why not just take the image with the DSLR in the first place? Usually from people who also think a single shot is going to capture “everything”.
Sure, for Instagram it can be “fine”. But the real magic with the method is taking multiple shots either at higher macro levels or with “home made” sensor shift. With stitching the secret is to have generous overlap.
That combined with multible different exposures combined to extract all the DR from the shot (longer for slide and shorter for negative), and you can have something that blows a drumscan out of the water, for a fraction of the price, and at your disposal twenty four seven.
It has gotten a bit easier. If you want to be serious about your scans I highly recommend the Panasonic S1R. True RGB capture and a 3:2 pixel resolution of 189mp means you don't have to stitch unless you plan to go beyond 24" printers. With the crops my typical 4x5/8x10/6x7 resoltuion is 155mp, and 1:1 images are roughly 125mp. These sizes enable you to make a 360dpi (important for Epson) print up to 24". Add a couple more passes and stitching and you're well beyond the 44" size.
The S1R has a few features that make it ideal for scanning actually.
1. It can scan in 1:1, 4:3, 3:2 (native), and even XPan crops. This save a TON of cropping time later when it comes to a full roll, I cannot stress that enough. Bafflingly it does not have a 4x5 crop...
2. It tethers like a champ with it's own software that is free. What's more, the USB-C connection charges the battery, so no AC adapter needed.
3. The screen both flips up, and sideways. So when you're scanning with an L bracket you can flip the camera so as to not lose any resolution when scanning 645. If you use a copy stand like me it's harder to orient the carrier sideways, so this is quite handy.
4. The AF covers the whole sensor, and it's contrast dependent. This ensures that you get perfect focus every time. I've found this very reliable even when using pixel shift.
5. The electronic shutter, no vibration.
Pixel shift files are inherently a little bit better than bayer when it comes to noise and shadow recovery so I haven't found it necessary to do any HDR work. Even when it comes to E6 film it tends to muddle things up more than reveal any info in high density areas. Of course I also scan a lot with a single capture. There are those that say a bayer file will always be far inferior to a CCD line scanner, and in my experience the penalty is not as big as one would imagine. Turns out bayer interpolation is pretty good. The files appear detailed and crisp at 100%, and sharpen well.
This camera coupled with Negative Supply film holders has been a boon to my productivity. I'm now scanning 35mm to 8x10 and getting fabulous quality. It's a great time to shoot film I'll tell you that.