Well, I know an Olympus EP2 is inbound to a location in Florida that could affect this poll if retaken in a year...
Raid, you've probably been following the trends more closely, but it seems to me the mostly-digital percentage has been dropping off as the votes come in. I wonder what the significance of that might be....Such numbers usually become stable after a while, but with digital cameras this could be different. In one year, we may see a different poll outcome.
What do you think? Is this "it"?
Well, I know an Olympus EP2 is inbound to a location in Florida that could affect this poll if retaken in a year...
Raid, you've probably been following the trends more closely, but it seems to me the mostly-digital percentage has been dropping off as the votes come in. I wonder what the significance of that might be.
I really don't think a poll with such a small sample of the number of people that belong only to this forum means very much. Also consider that this forum likely has a higher portion of dedicated film shooters than in the outside world. I don't think this is "it" yet.
Bob
Hi Bob,
I view the RFF members as our "population", as I am only interested in how RFF members feel about this issue.
Fair enough, but it still says nothing about film and if it will or will not become harder to get. That is determined by the outside world. I agree that it is likely to change over time to more digital and less film than it shows now. If it was 5 years ago it would have been more film than digital. Things change but in this forum maybe slower than elsewhere but they do change.
Bob
I have only become excited about taking pictures again because I have 1) gone back to film, and 2) started using a rangefinder. Why didn't I get one of these years ago? I just didn't know any better. ;-(
To me it represents the difference between doing something you love (shooting film) and getting paid work which for me, seems to have to be mainly digital.
Film is about fun while digital is about getting jobs done