Oh, I haven't been paying attention so it's a slower-moving one than in the past. It's always the same argument though.TylerDeadPine wrote: Sat Sep 07, 2024 1:19 am it’s weird seeing a kind of argument in the Tech forum.
You're probably right about us never agreeing about this. If you can't understand what I'm saying here then you don't understand the difference between analogue and digital information. And everything I've said about information theory and mathematics will just be whooshing straight past. The qualities of the ink, paper and typeface have no bearing on the information content of the book, which is encoded in the letters, and which can be reproduced perfectly by copying the letters. Hence, we still have copies of books written thousands of years ago. What I am saying is objectively, and categorically, correct. Text is digital information. Digital is not a synonym for computer.If you think that the text in a book, as in the ink on the page, is a digital representation of the words, then I understand why we can’t come close to agreeing.
What you’ve just said is objectively, and categorically false.
There are people like Steven Spielberg who, while they accept that 35mm film is a dying medium, still like to shoot on it because that's what they've always done and that's what they like to do. And he can afford it. Then there's others like David Lynch who decided "fuck that, it's the art that's important and digital is cheaper and better" and gave up shooting on film years ago. But I don't think there's many people silly enough to think that 35mm film is a good archival format. It's notoriously unstable and has a habit of spontaneously catching fire.Film isn't my world but I wonder if there are industry equivalents of Steve Albini, Walter Sear, etc.
When you say "other industries have been wooed by ephemeral digital formats" though, understand it's ALL other industries. As well as the music industry too. It's all industries. It's all information. Skipping over "ephemeral" since I already talked at length about how popular digital formats have stuck around for many decades. Nobody thinks analogue tape is the best archival format for storing anything in ANY business any more. I understand some people here decided a long time that analogue tape had been declared the winner for all time, but the opposite has clearly happened. Even in the music industry.
But why so emotionally attached? I don't talk about this emotionally, I think it's an interesting topic, but if I talk about it on here people always get very upset. I think part of it has to do with feelings about time, impermanence, change, the eventual destruction of all things, and wanting something stable to hold onto, to reassure us that the things we create have permanence... but they don't.