darkroommike
Subscriber
I'm just throwing this out here to see if others feel this way, too.
When I was young (and dinosaurs roamed the earth) this whole "interweb" thing did not exist. We had great photo magazines like the British Journal of Photography, Modern Photography and Popular Photography. And we had "gurus" that wrote monthly columns; folks like David Vestal and Cora Wright Kennedy, etc.
These folks and many others wrote monthly columns mostly detailing their own adventures in the darkroom. There were other mags and other writers but I noticed a trend, more and more folks writing to ask, not for advice, but rather for validation for whatever hair-brained half-cocked exposure or processing notion they had already conceived. If the columnist, based on "lo their many years doing something the right way" told the newcomer it won't work, the newbie would start an argument. Later in my timeline the columnists started suggesting an experimental method the newcomer could use to test his idea in the laboratory/darkroom and would again get ignored.
It seems to have got worse as things progressed (especially after Al Gore invented the Internet). Not so much on this forum which is well moderated and screwed down (in a good way) but groups on less moderated forums. It's been a downhill slide progressing from BBS's, Newsgroups, Chat rooms, Yahoo groups and now Facebook. And all the replies on such forums have equal weight, with only a casual read you never know if the responder is a 21st. Century version of Ansel Adams, Geoff Crawley, etc. or some "fauxtographer" that got a film camera just this week, loves shooting "redscale", Chardonnay (some of them process their film in wine) and long walks in the moonlight. And these folks are quite willing to squirt Canon AE-1's full of WD40, take apart Compur shutters for CLA's, and fix their own cameras.
I don't consider myself an expert but I've done a photographic thing or two in 50 years taking pictures and 40+ years developing my own stuff, I have a huge reference library which includes some heavy hitters which I won't bother to list here. I can do computers, math, and chemistry. And I can make Internet search engines "sing"; I did it for a living when I did computer tech support. So if someone asks and I don't know the answer I can refer them to someone or some published work that really knows how to do these things.
I guess what I'm saying is that these NOOBS aren't asking for advice, are not seeking the right way to do things, they are just bragging about their way of doing it and seeking validation. What's your take? I don't really know how to parse this as a poll, but if someone else would create one, I'll participate.
When I was young (and dinosaurs roamed the earth) this whole "interweb" thing did not exist. We had great photo magazines like the British Journal of Photography, Modern Photography and Popular Photography. And we had "gurus" that wrote monthly columns; folks like David Vestal and Cora Wright Kennedy, etc.
These folks and many others wrote monthly columns mostly detailing their own adventures in the darkroom. There were other mags and other writers but I noticed a trend, more and more folks writing to ask, not for advice, but rather for validation for whatever hair-brained half-cocked exposure or processing notion they had already conceived. If the columnist, based on "lo their many years doing something the right way" told the newcomer it won't work, the newbie would start an argument. Later in my timeline the columnists started suggesting an experimental method the newcomer could use to test his idea in the laboratory/darkroom and would again get ignored.
It seems to have got worse as things progressed (especially after Al Gore invented the Internet). Not so much on this forum which is well moderated and screwed down (in a good way) but groups on less moderated forums. It's been a downhill slide progressing from BBS's, Newsgroups, Chat rooms, Yahoo groups and now Facebook. And all the replies on such forums have equal weight, with only a casual read you never know if the responder is a 21st. Century version of Ansel Adams, Geoff Crawley, etc. or some "fauxtographer" that got a film camera just this week, loves shooting "redscale", Chardonnay (some of them process their film in wine) and long walks in the moonlight. And these folks are quite willing to squirt Canon AE-1's full of WD40, take apart Compur shutters for CLA's, and fix their own cameras.
I don't consider myself an expert but I've done a photographic thing or two in 50 years taking pictures and 40+ years developing my own stuff, I have a huge reference library which includes some heavy hitters which I won't bother to list here. I can do computers, math, and chemistry. And I can make Internet search engines "sing"; I did it for a living when I did computer tech support. So if someone asks and I don't know the answer I can refer them to someone or some published work that really knows how to do these things.
I guess what I'm saying is that these NOOBS aren't asking for advice, are not seeking the right way to do things, they are just bragging about their way of doing it and seeking validation. What's your take? I don't really know how to parse this as a poll, but if someone else would create one, I'll participate.