Hi Bertram,
Bertram2 said:
I read your contribution with honest interest, but I think you packed a bit too much meaning on my general question. It is a question only, and not a law-like philosophical statement, a question based on my personal observation only.
I know I read too much into what you wrote, it was on purpose. I appreciate that it was simply a question, but I found a few assumptions in there that I had thoughts about.
Bertram2 said:
Discussing this question like a philosphical statement you must necessarily end up with the question if HCBs photos have less quality than those of AA.
I don't think so. If I would treat your question as a philosophical statement and point out that you evaluate acceleration of photography, and then continue to show that I don't agree with that statement from my point of view, then that evaluation is irrelevant to me. Which it is. So, treating the question as a philosophical statement doesn't imply deciding who of the two masters is better.
But of course, this is a bit theoretical and hypothetical. Below, I agree with you that my claim that you identify acceleration with badness, is exaggerated.
Bertram2 said:
Philosophically I am still anchored in the framework of Historic Materialism and so my question points mainly on the law of acceleration, which is a true inherent law of our system of producing and consuming.
I agree completely. Consumption driven production will always raise specs and accelerate production cycles to stay ahead of the competition. Also, since the specifications, i.e. the capabilities, of cameras are always raised, one of them must be the speed at which one can take photographs. Exactly what we've seen with the expansion of the P&S market. Lower barriers to entry are also good for the producers, so speed of photography is desirable for them in that way, too.
Bertram2 said:
So acceleration itself is not "bad" per se, that wasn't implied either with my question. It just pointed on the loss, which is , so to say, the price we pay for the positive effects of acceleration alias progress.
I may have twisted your words a bit, true. You point out the loss. I wanted to add the more positive side to the discussion, too, to keep things in balance. Not referring to your contributions, which I highly value, I see many people around me look only at the bad sides. I want to point to the positive sides.
Bertram2 said:
What do we gain, what do we pay for it, that is the question asked more precisely. A question worth some thoughts IMHO.
I think one major advantage is availability. My mother was always wary of my father's SLR. It was overwhelming. She won a disposable camera once and her pictures were very interesting. She's seen tens of thousands over the years, but her take was much more social than my father's. A fast (just click) way of photography was a big help for her.
What we amateurs gain is that we can focus on other things than technicalities. My SLR is always on AE mode: I compose (DOF is part of it) and let the machine do what it can do better than me. If it's a matter of getting a needle between two dots, any machine can do it better and faster than I can. I don't use autofocus because I consider that too important for my composition. But if others don't, there's much more choice now. If you want slow, you can have it, but if you want quick or you need it, it's there too.
In other words, it's choice, as your signature points out
🙂
Peter.