For me it's all about comprehensibility and agency. Call me old-fashioned, but I like to be aware of what's going on and how things work. I am most comfortable with mechanical things and traditional tools and methods, but when I must use electronic devices I want to be in the loop as much as possible.
The appeal of mechanical film cameras is the same as that of any other type of machinery because I know that with enough study I could come to know how and why the entire mechanism works, and with some effort repair it or even fabricate new parts. Of course, this isn't necessarily a practical consideration, only philosophical.
Likewise with electronics, older devices with discrete components and wiring are entirely understandable if you know the nature of electrons and spend enough time tracing circuits. With microelectronics the direct connection between understanding and operation is effectively broken because the encapsulated circuitry is too small to see and too abstract and complex for any one person to easily comprehend.
Contemporary electronics designers and programmers understand their creations in a modular way whereby the basic hardware and software components are treated as indivisible building blocks or subroutines that can be linked together to work as parts of larger systems. The collective mind can know everything about a particular technology, but individuals are limited in their complete knowledge to their particular specialties.
In the field, a service technician or hobbyist operates at the user interface or sub-assembly level. There is no possibility of home-brew, handcrafted microchips, image sensors or disk drives because these are necessarily the products of a complex industrial supply chain and clean-room fabrication process. How it's made or how it works is considered to be none of your business. If it breaks, replace it with a new one.
The average end-user of a high-tech device is strictly limited to the capabilities built into the operating system, constrained to follow rigid instructions to get a range of pre-determined outputs, be they image captures, information displays or physical actions. Every person who owns a smart phone, digital camera or laptop computer swipes, taps or clicks in the same ways because if it's not in the program, it's not going to happen.
The next steps go down the path of machine learning and artificial intelligence. Already, the phone app can tell you what to buy, what to see, what to hear, where to eat and where to go, based on your previous inputs. The GPS can show you how to get there. Alexa and her friends can tell you what you should be wearing when you arrive. Soon the car will drive itself and the camera will learn what you are interested in and take pictures for you along the way.
Speaking strictly for myself, I'm not too eager to go down that road.