03-26-2018, 10:59 PM
(03-26-2018, 10:40 PM)Guest Wrote: I don't believe film photography will make a long-lasting comeback. Like most "retro" crazes, there'll be a brief resurgence of interest, then everyone will get bored with it and go back to making duck-faced selfies on their cellphones.
What I'm talking about is the way today's IT workers have a very superficial understanding of the underlying technologies, if any at all. Most self-styled "engineers" I know don't have the first clue about electronics. What's more, they display a complete lack of curiosity about what makes things tick. The fundamental concepts that today's digital technology is built upon are still the same as 30 years ago. It hasn't gone away, and it hasn't been replaced, as many people imagine. It has merely been abstracted out of conscious awareness. It's still there, and it will need to be maintained for as long as high-tech civilization endures. The knowledge necessary to peel back the layers of abstraction and get at root causes has to be preserved, or they'll eventually encounter problems nobody remembers how to solve.
I saw an example of what you are talking about, except 20 years ago. I knew a fellow I used to do photography trips with, who had a string of contracting jobs because hr knew how to code in Fortran4 and or Cobol. In the mid-late 90's, many "institutional" data centers were still using mainframes than ran those languages, and the young people coming out of computer science programs at that time had no idea how to code with those. So, even as an "old man", he had all the work he could handle.
I agree about the current film craze. However, I wouldn't mind teaching black and white darkroom workshops where I could separate some funds from the clutches of the Gen Z'ers who think going back to film is a super hot idea. There are not many around like me that did photography actively during the film to digital bridge years. They have no idea the subtleties of doing it, other than what "the box" says to do. I spent many years in a darkroom developing my own formulas. If they want some of these secrets, it's time to pay up :)