Yet Another Camera Company Ponders Dropping Film
from the dying-a-slow-death dept
These stories are becoming so common that they're almost unremarkable these days, but Canon is the latest camera manufacturer to say it's considering quitting the film camera business. Such a decision, following a similar move by Nikon earlier this year, would certainly indicate the long-predicted death of the film camera business -- even though the film-using community lives on. Perhaps now stories about the death of film will slow down, and we'll be treated to analyst predictions about how long it will be before cameraphones kill the standalone digital camera business.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Saying all that, when they find a way to mix great camera capability with a phone, and walkman, and large memory (or include a way to add memory with flash drives and the like), global capabilities (such as quad band), then you've got a phone that I will definitely invest in!
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Re:
With the current techonologies, trying to feat 8MP into a half finger nail size sensor will boost digital noise to the roof! Then comes the problem of the processing chip, a good one is too much expensive to put in a cell phone and is power hungry, talk about huge batteries ( at least considering the usual size found on a cellphone ).
Then comes the problem of optical quality. Good glass is VERY expensive and bulky, my dSLR's cheapest lens cost me 600€ ( ~$760 ) and wights more then 500g... I dont want a 700g with $800 worth of glass cellphone.
It's easier to get a camera with cellphone capabilities than the opposite. Maybe they can eventually replace cheap P&S in a near future, but not good cameras.
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I love you, Coward!
What I see happening is more camera-makers dropping film, until there are just a few companies serving this "niche" market.
It will be quite a number of years before film dies off completely, if it ever does.
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Well
I doubt film will die off completely, as there will be some professional level market that values it. Until digital can duplicate the effects of, say, infra red film or good quality black and white film and media, digital won't completely replace film. This is when photography is an artform, rather the just something to document everyday life.
The idea the cellphones will ever be good cameras is laughable. Even at high resolutions, there isn't enough ability for a cellphone to take good pictures, even for everyday users. Camera phones are a gimmick for cellular companies to get teenagers to eat up data bandwidth sending pictures thus being able to charge more for their phone service. There is NOT ONE FEATURE on a cellphone that is not designed to make cellular providers richer.
As long as cell phones are self serving profit makers for cellular providers, they will never become an ideal all in one device for everyday use, which means they will never offer greater capacity to take higher resolution pictures then what the cellular networks can easily transmit with their available bandwidth. I.e. 8mp pictures would saturate a cellular network and bring it to its knees if people started sending large resolution pictures. That is why camera phones don't offer more then 1 - 2mp images. Not because there is no CCD available to make higher resolution pictures, or the cost is too high (honestly, a $600 cell phone SHOULD offer 8mp camera), its simply because cell networks could not handle the bandwidth required by people sending high resolution pictures to each other.
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Film still rulez in my book!
Now film photography versus digital photography? Well, I went from film to digital and switched back in a heartbeat because the quality (on an 8+ MP camera, yes) was just not there in comarison to film... and when you start considering enlargements, digital is eons behind! And I'm not even talking about color accuracy and depth...
Unless you start buying the $1,500 (or more) digital camera's, you will get nowhere near the posibilities of photography... and even then it's still not as good as film. And that is just taking pictures, we won't even start about what you can do in the darkroom that cannot be duplicated with a computer...
I think JerseyRich is right though... film photographty will be such a niche market only few companies serving us 35mm film fanatics...
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Now, having said all that, the common layman in your average household is going to prefer digital cameras simply for the fact that it's good enough to take regular, everyday pictures without the cost of buying the film and printing it. Paper is much cheaper to buy for your printer. If you go to a printing shop, and ask for glossy card stock, or matte card stock, it's the same as buying name brand "photo paper" and is so much more cheaper. You can buy reams and it's still cheaper than the 50 sheets of photo paper you buy from office depot and the like. I love buying paper from printing compaines. It's one thing that consumer companies neglect to tell buyers. That the same pre-packaged paper they sell for an arm and a leg, is the same as the ones you can buy from the printer. They just cost more because they put special names to the papers, and package them all nice and neat. And don't say that printer ink costs you more either. How many households actually print out their photos that they take with their digital cameras? Most people send their photos through e-mail, or burn them on CDs and send them to family and friends in a digital format.
For the professionals out there and the artists, well, it depends on whether you are making a living out of it, or whether it's a hobby. Hobbyists can spend thousands of dollars on really good high end dSLRs, with all the bells and whistles, filters, lenses, accessories and come out with some darn great pictures that are good enough to use. Even some businesses use them for cost vs profit purposes, i.e. Sears, or mall seasonal photos, etc. Those places use good dSLRs, because it's cheaper for them business wise.
For the absolute purist and artist, I would think that they would own BOTH a dSLR and a completely manual SLR, both top notch, and completely manual. This way, you get the best of both worlds and can manipulate your photos in all the ways you want. Have your own darkroom and also buy the best imaging software you can get your hands on, learn how to actually USE all the features of said software to enable yourself the full potential of using digital media. There are artists out there who use both medias and merge them and I truly am awed by those talented people.
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You do not need to purchase ring tones ever! But cell phone companies insist that you do. My cell phone uses ring tones that you can't buy anywhere as they are songs and snippets from CDs that I own and music I manipulated to make as ring tones. Used a USB cable to download to my phone, and voila. Custom made ring tones! In fact, here's an article on cnet that I was surprised to read on how to do this exact same thing, and was amazed that cell phone companies had not started to sue the writer of the article. I spread the link to everyone I know. I almost lost my job when I was on a call and a customer was complaining about being charged twice for a ringtone he had already purchased, but had lost when the cell phone was lost. I gave this person instructions on how to download his own music and create the ringtones himself and one of the supervisors heard the last bit of my instructions and pulled me aside to admonish me and tell me that it's not company policy to give out those instructions because we lose money and promptly wrote me up for it!
As for photos, I use mine to take photos. I hardly ever send using my phone. I get home, use my wonderful USB cable (or others can use BlueTooth or infra-red -- depends on your phone's capabilities), download my pics, and send using e-mail for internet I already pay for.
Most of the "side" stuff (other than actually using the device for making phone calls) that cell phone companies charge for can be done without using their networks and "internet" charges, or ringtones, games, etc.
Let's face it though. What the cell phone campines have going for them is that the common cell phone user iis just not smart enough to get around the system and use their phone without accruing those extra charges. They complain about it, but when you teach them how to get around incurring thsoe extras, they tell you how they are not "savvy" or smart enough, and don't want to have to bother to "work" to use their phone.
Now I've gone and ranted about cell phones, when this article is about film. I digress.
This is the reply to both the comments left by Daniel and Topher3105.
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Oops....
http://msn-cnet.com.com/Make-your-own-ring-tones/1200-12358_4-5160596.html?part=msn-cnet&am p;subj=dl&tag=dl
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The high end is leaving too
not mentioned as often is the wider dynamic
range of digital cameras.
I used to own a Leica and several lenses that
cost a small fortune. I built a dark room and
enjoyed it much. So I do have a standard of
comparison.
To me the freedom from chemicals is a fair
compromise for the reduced resolution. For
some work film will remain the only choice,
but it's a pretty narrow niche even now.
A few digital cameras will accept the old
glass that we love so much. It's the glass,
the lens is the thing, without that the
number of mega pixels is only limiting the
size of the print (all else being equal.)
You can see this as crappy digital cameras
are marketed to an unknowledgeable consumer
by their mega pixels. Camera's with fixed focus
lenses that are just a sliver of plastic take photos
that are crap... you just get just bigger crap as
sensor costs decrease but glass remains expensive.
That said, there are some damn fine digital
cameras available for little money these days.
I paid more for a Canon F-1 body alone than
my Olympus 8080-wz (which has it's faults but
can take a great photo with some coaching.)
I'll still keep a couple film camera's around. The
Crown Graphic and the F-1 for sure. But any
new cameras in my foreseeable future will be
digital.
l
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Agfa have dumped all of their inventory on eBay
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