When I read Bill's post, this passage from the Ken Rockwell site about film vs. digital comes to mind:
"...OK, I've had it with this idiocy. back to top of article Here are the examples I've been too busy shooting to waste my time scanning and posting. We all know the other websites showing a big name digital SLR looking as good as film resolution. Baloney. You may not realize that those sites are actually sponsored by those camera companies and the guy running them doesn't really know how to get good results on film. He then only compares them at such low resolution that you can't see what film's resolution is all about. It takes skill to get optimum resolution on film.
These are two crops out of this image, one shot on a brand new digital camera and the other on a cheap film camera with a 50 year-old lens:
Original image:
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/images/filmdig/McGeeIndex.jpg
Film Scan:
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/images/filmdig/4990scan.jpg
Digital Scan:
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/images/filmdig/digital.jpg
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/filmdig.htm
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If you want convenience over quality, want something that's obsolete the second you buy it, want to be chasing megapixel counts every couple years, want to have an image capture technology that is entirely dependent on batteries that drain in hours rather than months/years (don't forget to keep your eye on that battery meter, Bill), don't particularly care for resolution, don't mind waiting for your camera to "boot" like your computer, think film grain is as distracting as digital noise, don't think you'll ever want to take a long exposure of something that lasts 5, 10, 15 seconds (or more), want to blind people with auto-white balance pre-flash, infrared zoom focus beam, then blind your subject with that flash needed to take pics as you sit on a comfy chair zooming in and out (rather than walking around the subject to properly compose your pic) as you jab your expensive and slow and crappy 3.5-5.6 auto zoom lens in your subject's face (as you wonder why people scatter when you reach for your camera), want to waste precious hours of your life in front of a PC futzing with Raw files, want an image capture technology that is eternally tied to finiky and ever-changing computer technologies and software, want to spend a small fortune on over-priced inks every month for your dodgey photo-printer, live in fear that your hard-drive will one day crash (and it invariabley will), hope you don't mind waiting for that autofocus to hunt in low light (when you could have focused in a fraction of a second like you can do with a manual focus rangefinder)... don't mind those dust spots on the sensor (Careful when you clean it! Best to send it out...), don't mind those 4 or 5 "stuck pixels". They're not too distracting, and you can always Photoshop them out - or just live with them.
...so quick burn those CDs for back up (just hope that too survive, and don't become unreadable on the day your drive crashes - IF you were lucky enough to back up those 50,000 images you captured), hope your camera makes it past warranty and don't mind springing for another $1000 to replace your toy if it breaks after the warranty expires since they're generally not "fixable" for reasonable dollars (rather than the $50-100 bucks it costs to CLA and cover most repairs for many film cameras, every 10, 20, 30 years - which is why several of the ones I shoot are pushing 40 years old and still work as new. Do you really think any DSLR anyone owns now will be around and 100% functional in the year 2043? ) if you think click-view-delete; click-view-delete; click-view-delete; click-view-delete...download images into HD, futz with images for hours is somehow enjoyable...
Then enjoy your new toy, there Bill. More power t' ya. Make sure you don't take that delicate electronic capture device out in any kind of inclimate weather, especially moisture and humidity or you'll end up with a $1000 paperweight. Enjoy having a computer chip and some algorythm some developer created take your pictures for you! Hope you don't miss highlight detail too much in those flat, unevocative, low-res, digital images you zoomed across the room to take (as you sat nice and comfy on a chair) with that $1500, 12mm-1550mm/3.5-5.6 zoom lens, and those CCDs don't like shiny things or hot areas too much, you know.
Perhaps, one day, computers chips and algorythms will handle everything for us! I like to draw and paint with watercolor. I "look forward" to the day when an some Japanese consumer electronics company develops a computerized paint brush, and I just tell it what to paint and it does it. Then that hobby I enjoy will be soooo much more convenient - with better results too! I can sit on the sofa, tell my electronic paintbrush to paint something, then I can "click-view-delete" until it comes up with something I like! All those "failed" attempts doing things the old school way (that I learned so much from) will be a thing of the past - and my amature watercolor gallery will be sooo much better, and more convenient! Who needs to go through all that trouble of actually developing and learning. I won't even have to think ; ) Just let the computer chip do it! Still waiting for that gallery of masterpieces created in Adobe Illustrater. That's been out a while - wonder why it hasn't happened yet. Think I'll "think about it".