Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/26

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Subject: [Leica] RE: OT: A little history
From: bdcolen at earthlink.net (B. D. Colen)
Date: Wed Jan 26 11:19:58 2005

Emanuel Lowi wrote..
"you can bet
that the hardware and software manufacturers will
conspire to make digital photography technology
outmoded or incompatible with the rest of the workflow
process in some way every several years."

This reminds me of my late father's saying that he was convinced the
motor drive was invented by Kodak and slipped to the Japanese in order
to sell more film. But of course he was kidding. ;-)



-----Original Message-----
From: lug-bounces+bdcolen=earthlink.net@leica-users.org
[mailto:lug-bounces+bdcolen=earthlink.net@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of
Emanuel Lowi
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 6:03 PM
To: lug@leica-users.org
Subject: [Leica] RE: OT: A little history


I believe one of the basic premises of contemporary
technology development is the concept of "planned obsolescence," with
the deliberate goal of encouraging consumers to buy new tools on a
regular basis, in lock-step with the constantly increasing profit motive
of the manufacturers.

Film-based Leica was a longstanding exemplar of the
opposite philosophy. All that was required to keep
pace with expectations of higher quality was quite
simple: load a new type of film. 

In this regard, Leica was utterly out of step with the
times, and therefore ceased to be profitable in the contemporary way of
understanding that economic imperative.  

No matter how high the megapixel counts get, moving
seemingly ever closer towards the goal of delivering
higher quality big-sized enlargements, you can bet
that the hardware and software manufacturers will
conspire to make digital photography technology
outmoded or incompatible with the rest of the workflow
process in some way every several years.

CDs will lose their current ubiquitousness in a few
short years. Memory card technology will change in yet
unknown ways. USB connections will be replaced by
something completely different. Thirty megapixels wil
not be enough to keep pace because some other link in
the chain will require a new camera.

The rat on the treadmill racing to reach an imaginary destination that
permanently remains out of reach is the paradigm which drives this era.
It is something like radioactive half-life and, in my view, equally
dangerous.

Emanuel  

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Replies: Reply from sethrosner at nycap.rr.com (Seth Rosner) ([Leica] RE: OT: A little history)
In reply to: Message from lowiemanuel at yahoo.ca (Emanuel Lowi) ([Leica] RE: OT: A little history)