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It's disingenuous at best, and just plain insulting. And that ignores the reality that the general public is convinced cell phones are good enough, and those have full-time live view.
not trying to cause trouble but why is it disingenuous and insulting to say a cell phone is good enough, it is good enough. we use film and whatever other light sensitive chemical medium not because it is vitally important to our survival or because it is imperative to have a negative caused by light reflecting off of a referent or that a chemical print made in a dark ( or dim ) room has to be made, but because its fun ( at this point ). for most people a cellphone camera IS good enough. it is attached to the phone that everyone from the age of like 6or 7 to 100 has with them, its not hard to use, you can delete photos that you don't like, you don't have to pay for processing and you can share it with your friends and family ( or make physical prints if needed ). at this point chemical photography is done because it is fun not because it is for whatever reason "superior". if this is not true, if a cellphone for most people isn't good enough to take snappies of friends, family, fun times, delicious food ( more fun times ) the traffic accident caused by the clown behind you at the stop light, the breathtaking sunset or rainbow ... why is this not true? they say ( and have said for decades ) the best camera is the one you have with you ... its always with us, and it works at least as good as the millions of 35mm cameras that were made for general purpose ...
the whole digital drools film rools argument kind of died about 10 years ago. .. sorry ..
and before you suggest I am disingenuous or some sort of film / digital biggot, I make my own photo emulsion, I make my own cameras and I make prints with film and paper for state and federal archives. for the most part that is a specialized situation... and for IDK 10+ years state archives don't want film but digital files burned to a cd and ink jet prints... even the HABS project at the LOC accepts ink prints ( they want the film though )..
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