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#26 2009-06-27 12:25 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7045
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Gatchaman wrote:
Wow, I can't buy a decent buggy whip anywhere, my analog TV stopped working, and now this.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#27 2009-06-27 12:28 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7045
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Tallgeese wrote:
Digital TV is not superior to analog. Sorry, it just isn't.
Maybe you need a new TV to see the difference.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#28 2009-06-27 12:29 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7045
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Alien wrote:
Bren wrote:
down. Hopefully maybe some alternative type of film is available to hobbyists and professionals, but I'm sure they'll assert that whatever the alternative is, it's not quite the same.
Velvia, mostly. Easier to process (E-6), and gives similarly vivs colour. Velvia was the first film to really hurt Kodachrome sales.
Jasoco wrote:
I'm surprised we're not still riding horses and buggies, and living by candlelight.
Or making oil paint pictures, for instance. Oh, wait.
.tsooJ
Silly Alien, only artists use oils. Real people use Photoshop.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#29 2009-06-27 12:57 pm
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
There are photographic artists. Some even control the development of their film as part of the creative process. Personally, I think photography is overrated. They're just stealing what was already there.
Ho Eyo He Hum
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#30 2009-06-27 1:14 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7045
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Did you think I was being literal minded? In a sense, those who use buggy whips are also artists-- or at least performers. The difference is that the buggy whip is still available, but kodachrome will not be.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#31 2009-06-27 10:43 pm
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 16024
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Alien wrote:
Bren wrote:
down. Hopefully maybe some alternative type of film is available to hobbyists and professionals, but I'm sure they'll assert that whatever the alternative is, it's not quite the same.
Velvia, mostly. Easier to process (E-6), and gives similarly vivs colour. Velvia was the first film to really hurt Kodachrome sales.
Yuck.
Kodachrome sales was hurt by the dwindling number of processors, not by Velveeta.
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
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#32 2009-06-28 2:59 am
- Bat
- Flawless Cowboy
- Royal Wombat

- From: Björk, Björk
- Registered: 2001-05-14
- Posts: 28541
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
avkills wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Digital TV is not superior to analog. Sorry, it just isn't.
Also, if an analog signal degrades, you get static in your picture/sound. If the digital signal degrades, you get nothing.You are so wrong on this it isn't even funny. But then again my definition of "digital video" is probably a lot different than yours.
Maybe my eyes are playing tricks, but it looks like 'Digital TV' was the phrase, not digital video- so yes, different.
Digital can have signal loss and still manage to give you 100% accuracy in the picture.
I believe we can subsume that under 'threshold values' and have done, after noting that signal strength likely varies in practice, like bandwidth. Cables degrade over time too, as well as companies perhaps being less able to deliver good signal stregth during peak usage hours, tho I'm less sure of the latter. What's sure is that the companies themselves cautioned a few months ago that their new digital signals weren't reaching as far, and perhaps 10% of their former viewing area might be lost in the switch. That might be conservative; they're unlikely to have erred to the neg side.
Digital video can survive generational copying way better than analog.
Duh. 
(crappy video compression as used by Comcast, Dish and others does not accurately represent digital video)
A/V sync issues are cause by dumb ass cable companies who do not understand that their real time MPEG2/4/H264 video encoders cause a video delay; and the audio must be delayed appropriately.
There's the rub, tho. What's possible in theory is academic. What's really being served up by real companies is what's seen, heard, dealt with.
As far as analog vs. digital audio. Jay Rose (award winning sound engineer) wrote an article for DV magazine proving that to be false. Analog has the same stair-step as digital, but instead it is noise. If digital audio was not better than analog; then they would still be mastering on analog, but they don't because 192Khz 24bit audio kicks analog into the dirt.
-mark
I followed the debate when it first arose, around '77 and the coming of CDs, with their 'perfect digital sound.' The argument then by the big companies was that the proposed 16 bit/44.1KHz standard produced sound that was indistinguishable from the real thing. Mathematical certainty... engineers like John Curl (likely before your time
) argued in audiophile and tech circles that, even if true, real-world implementations of the circuits needed- including filters that brickwalled at the needed 22,050 Hz (half of 44.1k) were almost impossible to design at the time without their own set of audible problems like ringing. It would make circuit design of real-world equipment difficult and the resulting sound 'imperfect' at best, as well as making digital mastering critically important and difficult- and it isn't easy to begin with, when there were substantial differences between the tape recorders originally used and those used for mastering CDs (head alignment and more).
But audio was in the doldrums. The economy wasn't good after the first OPEC embargo, and the industry's first crack at boosting sales- quadrophonic, making everyone buy more speakers, new electronics- was an epic fail. They needed a new gimmick, so pushed thru the new standard was. If they'd waited a year, the standard could've been frozen at a substantially higher, more fault-tolerant point, and everyone would've enjoyed the resulting better sound; but they didn't. There were stockholders needing appeasement. It was a done deal, and who in the front office really cared about music, sound, or the fact that an entire generation of audio equipment was compromised? Half the potential buyers were deafened by concerts, too stoned to care and/or conditioned to crap by growing up with super-compressed TV and radio sound. Hardly anyone even knew what live, unamplified music sounded like anymore. CDs sold, even tho the early ones tended to be pushed to the firewall for levels, aggravating things even more.
Yeah, 24/192 is much better, easier to master for, easier to design circuits for with available ICs. By odds it should work, over a quarter-century after digital audio commercially debuted. We haz fiber-optic cables and connectors; but some audiophiles and Steve Jobs still listen to their pricey analog stereos and collections of vinyl, despite iTunes. Ironic, innit?
(And on mastering, it also comes down partly to issues of cost and availability. Like film, I doubt much is available anymore in the way of tape, let 'lone 24+ track studio tape recorders. Vinyl LP output is likewise limited by a dearth of pressing plants; the few left are booked roughly thru eternity. Digital recording avoids A-D conversion issues in a world of mostly-digital playback devices, albeit used with way too many low-bitrate, lossy-format recordings. So it goes... and some time I'll tell you how I really feel.
)
One of these days I really have to get my new speakers built... likely sometime after my new[er] system. Books and sturner are waiting for [s]defeat[/s] me to join them at L4D et al. 
sp
Last edited by Bat (2009-06-28 3:00 am)
If all economists were laid end to end, they would not reach a conclusion - George Bernard Shaw
"Fire up a colortini, sit back, relax, and watch the pictures, now, as they fly through the air."
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#33 2009-06-28 1:42 pm
- pottymouth
- Uncreative
- Moderator

- From: JP, MA
- Registered: 2002-02-06
- Posts: 17408
- Website
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Y'know there's only one place in the country (world?) that actually develops the stuff? There are plenty of other comparable slide films out there that are cheaper and easier in every respect. Kodachrome slipped into a coma years ago. I'm glad its pain is finally over and I hope Kodachrome has gone to a better place.
I've actually been shooting a ton of film lately. I got set up to develop at home (with Diafine...smurfing awesome!) for just over $100 and I just scan the negs and work with them same as I do digital. People are ditching kick ass film cameras left and right and I've snapped up some awesome deals. Mama don't take my Tri-X away!
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#34 2009-06-28 4:00 pm
- radarman
- Member

- Registered: 2005-02-28
- Posts: 3614
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Bat wrote:
avkills wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Digital TV is not superior to analog. Sorry, it just isn't.
Also, if an analog signal degrades, you get static in your picture/sound. If the digital signal degrades, you get nothing.You are so wrong on this it isn't even funny. But then again my definition of "digital video" is probably a lot different than yours.
Maybe my eyes are playing tricks, but it looks like 'Digital TV' was the phrase, not digital video- so yes, different.
Digital can have signal loss and still manage to give you 100% accuracy in the picture.
I believe we can subsume that under 'threshold values' and have done, after noting that signal strength likely varies in practice, like bandwidth. Cables degrade over time too, as well as companies perhaps being less able to deliver good signal stregth during peak usage hours, tho I'm less sure of the latter. What's sure is that the companies themselves cautioned a few months ago that their new digital signals weren't reaching as far, and perhaps 10% of their former viewing area might be lost in the switch. That might be conservative; they're unlikely to have erred to the neg side.
Digital video can survive generational copying way better than analog.
Duh.
(crappy video compression as used by Comcast, Dish and others does not accurately represent digital video)
A/V sync issues are cause by dumb ass cable companies who do not understand that their real time MPEG2/4/H264 video encoders cause a video delay; and the audio must be delayed appropriately.There's the rub, tho. What's possible in theory is academic. What's really being served up by real companies is what's seen, heard, dealt with.
As far as analog vs. digital audio. Jay Rose (award winning sound engineer) wrote an article for DV magazine proving that to be false. Analog has the same stair-step as digital, but instead it is noise. If digital audio was not better than analog; then they would still be mastering on analog, but they don't because 192Khz 24bit audio kicks analog into the dirt.
-markI followed the debate when it first arose, around '77 and the coming of CDs, with their 'perfect digital sound.' The argument then by the big companies was that the proposed 16 bit/44.1KHz standard produced sound that was indistinguishable from the real thing. Mathematical certainty... engineers like John Curl (likely before your time
) argued in audiophile and tech circles that, even if true, real-world implementations of the circuits needed- including filters that brickwalled at the needed 22,050 Hz (half of 44.1k) were almost impossible to design at the time without their own set of audible problems like ringing. It would make circuit design of real-world equipment difficult and the resulting sound 'imperfect' at best, as well as making digital mastering critically important and difficult- and it isn't easy to begin with, when there were substantial differences between the tape recorders originally used and those used for mastering CDs (head alignment and more).
But audio was in the doldrums. The economy wasn't good after the first OPEC embargo, and the industry's first crack at boosting sales- quadrophonic, making everyone buy more speakers, new electronics- was an epic fail. They needed a new gimmick, so pushed thru the new standard was. If they'd waited a year, the standard could've been frozen at a substantially higher, more fault-tolerant point, and everyone would've enjoyed the resulting better sound; but they didn't. There were stockholders needing appeasement. It was a done deal, and who in the front office really cared about music, sound, or the fact that an entire generation of audio equipment was compromised? Half the potential buyers were deafened by concerts, too stoned to care and/or conditioned to crap by growing up with super-compressed TV and radio sound. Hardly anyone even knew what live, unamplified music sounded like anymore. CDs sold, even tho the early ones tended to be pushed to the firewall for levels, aggravating things even more.
Yeah, 24/192 is much better, easier to master for, easier to design circuits for with available ICs. By odds it should work, over a quarter-century after digital audio commercially debuted. We haz fiber-optic cables and connectors; but some audiophiles and Steve Jobs still listen to their pricey analog stereos and collections of vinyl, despite iTunes. Ironic, innit?
(And on mastering, it also comes down partly to issues of cost and availability. Like film, I doubt much is available anymore in the way of tape, let 'lone 24+ track studio tape recorders. Vinyl LP output is likewise limited by a dearth of pressing plants; the few left are booked roughly thru eternity. Digital recording avoids A-D conversion issues in a world of mostly-digital playback devices, albeit used with way too many low-bitrate, lossy-format recordings. So it goes... and some time I'll tell you how I really feel.)
One of these days I really have to get my new speakers built... likely sometime after my new[er] system. Books and sturner are waiting for [s]defeat[/s] me to join them at L4D et al.
sp
It's really a shame that optically scanned vinyl hasn't taken off. Vinyl records actually do a better job of recording audio information than CD's - the problem is that every time a record is played, the needle inadvertently damages the recording. Optical scanning eliminates that. You can use as high a resolution D/A as you like, since almost any D/A is likely to be less accurate than the laser/detector used to measure the groove.
The Smithsonian developed the technique to "play" broken records in their collection; and proved that the technique is not only viable, but preferable, to actually playing the record and recording the sound.
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#35 2009-06-28 9:01 pm
- TB
- Member
- Registered: 2006-03-03
- Posts: 322
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Jasoco wrote:
The faster all film disappears from the face of the earth, the better. We only recently got my mom into digital. For years she kept film.
I used to develop film in the One Hour Photo section at my local Kmart. Film is so analog. So outdated. So.. unnecessarily difficult. Digital is all "Snap, print, done!" I still watch people buy film at the store. FILM IN 2009! Not professionals either. Poor souls who want to take pictures of their kids birthday because they refuse to learn something new.
DOWN WITH FILM! The sooner the better. It took this long for TV to go digital for the same reason. People don't like change and would rather keep using the same outdated methods than learn something new. I'm surprised we're not still riding horses and buggies, and living by candlelight.
Why the big hurry? Surely there's a little room for some of us 'poor souls' with our snapshots in this digitally correct world.
I'd never part with my SACD and DVD Audio discs of Avalon & Hotel California. I wouldn't even consider vinyl copies of the same works as better.
On the other hand, I'm not getting rid of my widescreen video of Terminator either. It has angles and sound that are just not present in the dvd. I do email to friends-I even use Windows Messenger, but more often it's communication via the dial telephone (courtesy, Northern Telecom, 1976 or so-richer sound than electronic phones) and letters written or typed on a 1930's refurbished Royal portable.
Last edited by TB (2009-06-28 9:04 pm)
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#36 2009-06-28 9:09 pm
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
Kodachrome is (was?) a slide film.
Slides are pretty much only the realm pros now, the home slide projector has been a thing of the past for a very long time.
Some pros used kodachrome, though I suspect Ektachrome is suitable in most cases, and I don't think it is going away any time soon.
In her right hand Jenny held the Bible of her mother
Jenny had a pistol in the other
-- Steve Taylor
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#37 2009-06-28 9:55 pm
Re: R.I.P. Kodachrome
I was a psychedelic light show artist for many years, and have a few friends who are still active in that art form. 35mm slides and slide projectors are a crucial element of element of any genuine, live, organic, non-digital light show, as are 16mm film-loops and movie projectors.
"It's better to be a pirate than to join the Navy."
--Steve Jobs
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