Thomas Bantel wrote:
I should have made my point a little more clear, actually I wanted to point
out exactly what you wrote. With traditional cameras, the sensor is the
film.
You can use any film you want, as long as it is for the same format. With a 
digital camera you are stuck with the sensor it has. You don't benefit by
new,
better sensors. With film you do. And that's the "magic" involved. The F1
has
really become a better camera, if you measure camera quality by the quality 
of the picture output. Of course such a modular system (which film and
camera 
really are) is much harder to do with a digital camera. But it may be not 
impossible. 

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Yes, but you would adjust the image coloring/hue/saturation, etc. in a
program like Photoshop.
NASA just made an agreement with Kodak to use their new DCS camera in space
flight.  The digital
camera does have one distinct advantage in that you can transmit the images
once they are taken.
As good as film is, you just can't do that. ;-)

BTW, I still use film-based cameras, but I do see things objectively.

Peter K
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