True but only if one wants to indulge in digital photography, and plunder the technology that digital has all but destroyed, all it does for the rest of us who are film photographers is put the prices of analogue lenses up.
Or, as it did in my case, bring me back to the world of film photography.
I bought a number of M, LTM and Konica AR lenses to use on my micro-4/3 camera. As it turned out, I ended up not much liking the angle of view of the Summicron (because of the sensor "crop") and rather than sell it, bought a nice Bessa R2A to put it on instead. Subsequently I have moved almost entirely back to film. And I have obtained more film cameras on which to use those other lenses, all of which have needed servicing and thus have helped keep the companies and technicians that do the servicing alive and employed.
New technologies very often "plunder" older ones, it's part of how the technologies develop. You may like the new, or you may not, but it is what it is.