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Thread: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

  1. #1

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    The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!



    Cameras.

    They're everywhere. In your phone, on your tablet, you have your point-n-shoot, and maybe even a DSLR. A few might even own a film camera. You can't escape the selfies, Instagram, Pinterest, and Facebook. People are deluged with photographs. And today, people are taking more pictures than ever before. It's been estimated that in the past 5 years, more photos have been taken than all the prior years combined.

    The sad part is that few of these photographs will survive beyond a year. To many people, a "picture" is only good for the moment. Moms and Dads want to snap every little movement of that new baby. Grandma wants to see everyone one of those too. When you want to show off the new puppy, you pull out the phone. And in a week, none of them have any real meaning and might even get "deleted" just to make room for more pictures that have little meaning as well inside of a couple of weeks.

    So what will become of all the pictures that are being taken today? Here is the reason that 99% of the photographs being taken today are soon going to be totally gone - digital images are no longer important enough to most people to actually keep them in printed form!

    Yes, I started in a film only world. We bought a roll of film and took our vacation photographs. We had them developed and printed. They were put in photo albums or photo boxes. We looked at them and cherished those memories with great care. They were a slice of our life and for many, if disaster struck, those photographs were the one thing we would try to find first. Wedding albums and photographs represented our LIFE and we salvaged all we could.

    It is estimated and less that 1 out of 100,000 photographs taken today actually ends up being a printed photograph. The digital world means you can look at those on some computer screen and without one, you have nothing. You probably have countless pictures that are just randomly stored and has no organization or way to locate them. Perhaps you have made some effort, but even that can seem overwhelming a task when you decide to tackle the task.

    Add to this, over the years, the technology has changed so fast, that many photographs taken 6-7 years ago are stored on a type of media that is no longer supported. I have boxes of floppy discs and not even a computer that works to view them. In 5 years or less, your DVD is going to be obsolete as will your USB drives. File types are going to change as well. And the technology of tomorrow may not support these "older" file types.

    Many today have older cell phones with countless pictures on them. Maybe you "shared" some on Facebook or Instagram or uploaded to your photo storage website. But none of these are "permanent" solutions to viewing your photos and sadly, many of your memories you captured today, aren't going to be around tomorrow. So where is that old cellphone today? In a drawer someplace, your not sure where, but you know it's around here somewhere!

    There are also countless memory cards filled with photographs. Each of those represent a small slice of you or something that was a part of your life. Some are older and you have fewer options to view them as technology simply outpaces their usefulness. Does anyone remember the 256mb SD cards when today, a 4 gb is considered tiny?

    Perhaps you go to a Professional Photographer and all you want is someone to "take some pictures and give us the disc". After all, it IS a "digital world" and it shouldn't cost you very much. You can "take them down to the 1 hr place" and get prints really cheap. No film. No prints from the lab needed to "see" them. So where are your discs today? Probably in that same drawer you haven't found yet where that old cell phone is "lost" in. I doubt you have your DVD's or old floppies on your wall! And when Mom asks if you have that adorable photo of your now 16 year old son or daughter- you know the one when they were 2- and you have to answer, I do, but I have to find it. "It's on a diskŠsomeplaceŠI thinkŠ.maybe we still doŠhoney, where did we put that disk again?".

    In my home, you will find photographs. Real, honest to goodness prints. Nothing fancy in most cases and most are just plain snapshots of family at holidays, on vacation, or doing something silly or even important. These are the slices of our lives where we can open the old "self sticking" album and find out it no longer sticks. Where memories of our life unfolds before our eyes. We laugh. We cry. We tease each other. Our life is right there. It's in that printed image that anyone can see. There is no wondering "if this file type is still supported" or does my "machine still have a DVD drive". None of that is needed. Even the older, not quite as sharp as they used to be eyes can see them and feel the emotions of that instant in time as if it happened yesterday. These are the things we protect with everything we have should some disaster strike and the ones we start looking for first if it does. All of a sudden that $250 DeLonghi Coffee maker isn't all that important. Nor is the fishing boat. Or the 72" big screen TV with all the bells and whistles. It's always the memories of our lives that become the thing we search for first.

    So if you are part of this "digital revolution", let me ask you- where are YOUR photographs? Stuck on some disc or stored out there is cyberspace someplace, hopefully, perhaps? Why didn't you actually purchase that $500 canvas to display in your home that your Professional photographer worked so hard to produce for you? That was a "one of a kind" work of ART and an heirloom piece for your family to have and remember that little slice of their life. It is something that will be passed from generation to generation and the only visual way your heirs will see what you looked like and the love and emotions you expressed the instant that image was captured.

    2025. You just found that DVD you had in that drawer you couldn't remember which one it was. Along with 9 old cell phones that no longer will work with today's new technology. Your 3 inch by 3 inch cube computer no longer has a DVD drive since in 2015 they were totally phased out. Your 3rd grandchild is sitting on your knee and asks to see pictures of their Mom- and all you have to show them is this piece of round plastic that is pretty much worthless. Not to mention dusty and scratched from all those old cellphones moving around every time you opened that drawer. And since Instagram had been merged with another company, and they started charging, you let that go 8 years ago.

    I guess that makes you one of the "most photographed generation that doesn't have a photograph in 10 years". I guess it wasn't that important then. Digital was cheap.
    Cameras were everywhere. It just didn't seem that important.

    Lost memories are expensive.
    Wilhelm (Sarasota)

  2. #2

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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Hmmmm....job security for film camera and dark room geeks?
    I like it!
    "I would feel more optimistic about a bright future for man if he spent less time proving that he can outwit Nature and more time tasting her sweetness and respecting her seniority"---EB White

  3. #3
    Jac@stafford.net's Avatar
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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Wilhelm, I appreciate your effort to express, once again among hundreds of similar posts, the penultimate statement regarding the future of photographs, however the photos to be kept in front of the public will, as it has always been, be by the judgement of certain critics, curators and historians.

    So stick around and see what happens.

  4. #4

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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    gmail is not going anywhere. So far so good.
    I am sure someone wrote this exact stuff when labs stopped accepting disc/110/instamatic/pick your own.
    Jpeg technology has not changed in over 20 years and i do not see how a change there will make anything about that obsolete.

    Obsolete hardware is hard to use when it is past due, mass and universally used software on the other hand lives on and on. Microsoft DOS and Jpeg are only a few examples of how this works.

    I have not used a DVD in a LONG time, and even though some LFPF member got super ofended when i said CD's and DVD's are already useless, they really are a thing of the past and have been for a long time.

    The amount of people using instagram, FB and youtube, is so much larger then those who used floppy disks, their fate is not yet carved in stone.

  5. #5
    bob carnie's Avatar
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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Disks and Dvds ahhh not so fast.... I lost my drobo and my scanner hardware drive would not accept a stick - the only way I kept going till I got my Drobo back up was using Cds and DVDs and over the years they have saved my ass.

  6. #6
    Les
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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Let me get out of my cocoon and slap a DVD on. I rent films this way and with the outfit that carries (here) 125K titles....I don't see them going anywhere fast. The sky is not falling yet, Bill.

    Also, some people listen to advise of other photographers, subsequently they triplicate their digi or film files and even keeping the copy away from their properties. Well, others likely don't take the pics v. seriously.

    People are free to make their own decisions....some of those can turn to mistakes = life.

    Les

  7. #7

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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    where are all those negatives and or photos of grandmas wedding? Are they in a thrown away album in some garbage heap? some crumbling old paper that needs "restoration"?
    Some people who care about their photos will work hard to preserve them, most people dont, and never did, and those photos today are as worthless and not worthy or preserving as ever.

  8. #8
    IanG's Avatar
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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Quote Originally Posted by koh303 View Post
    where are all those negatives and or photos of grandmas wedding? Are they in a thrown away album in some garbage heap? some crumbling old paper that needs "restoration"?
    Some people who care about their photos will work hard to preserve them, most people dont, and never did, and those photos today are as worthless and not worthy or preserving as ever.
    Negatives stayed with the photographer, prints remain in families. My Grandparents wedding was shot on 10x8, 12x10 and 15x112 cameras and the prints are almost as good as the day they were printed.

    Today with Digital everything can be lost with a click of a mouse accidentally, sure physical prints can be lost in extreme circumstances as well but it's far less likely.

    Ian

  9. #9

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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Sorry, I can't claim this. Like so much stuff, it was sent to me anonymously by a relative.
    Wilhelm (Sarasota)

  10. #10

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    Re: The Most Photographed Generation Will Have No Pictures in 10 Years!

    Quote Originally Posted by Bill_1856 View Post
    Sorry, I can't claim this. Like so much stuff, it was sent to me anonymously by a relative.
    Oh yeah, it sounded familiar...

    It's been out over a year. Which demonstrates how all those photos will be preserved. They will be floating around!

    This is generally credited as the source: Lost Memories are Expensive
    A Blog written by Mike Yost Photography


    https://mikeyostphotography.wordpres...s-in-10-years/

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