sitemistic said:
the problem is that film faces the same archivability problem as digital.
I really can't agree with this.
If I archive a roll of developed film properly now, and also put a set of digital JPEG images on a DVD or HDD or whatever in the safe with them... I am sure the film has a better chance of being in a usable condition and compatible with something 100 years from now than the digital files do.
Simply because there are less variables. With film, you have a simple transparency image... If you have a method of copying transparencies, the film will be useful, even if the analog processes are long dead.
With JPEGs on a DVD you have to worry about SO much more... Will there be DVD readers in 100 years? Will JPEGs be readable or convertible? Will we even be using the same kind of computers at all, or will we have moved onto quantum computing with solid state drives that only communicate wirelessly? Or something else, equally incompatible with the old DVD or HDD.
Of course, it's all totally speculative, humanity might not even survive 100 years to care if we can still look at old photos.
I think that people are tending to write off film too quickly... Although I
can see why, and I have no real argument with people who support digital, I just think that we're not going to see the total death of film the way many are predicting.
Film still has it's uses and it's charm... I think that people will always be interested by it and there will always be people who want to use it. Many painters and artists enjoy using charcoal to make pictures with, a method the cavemen used!
You can never overestimate the human drive to cling to old ways of doing things while simultaneously marching forward.