On 27/08/2012 4:48 AM, Steve Cottrell wrote:
On 26/8/12, William Robb, discombobulated, unleashed:

The goal of early photography was to capture a moment in time, it took
the technology a while to allow it. To say that because it took several
minutes to capture that moment because of technical limitations, early
photography has something in common with video is somewhat of a stretch.
Don't Bogart that joint, my friend, pass it over to me.

Video makes no pretensions that way, never has, never will.
To me, the sea change isn't still or video, it is how we look at images.
The vast majority of images now are viewed on monitors. The monitor
doesn't care if the image is moving or not, however people want instant
gratification.
Video really doesn't give them that the same way a discreet image does.
A 10 minute exposure to make a single image is, in effect, a moment in time.
A 10 minute video is, in effect, a waste of 10 minutes unless the person
actually knows something about shooting video, and most people don't.

This man knows what he is talking about!


This man (me) couldn't shoot a decent video if his dog's life depended on it. This is probably why I transitioned from video to still photography so quickly.

--

William Robb

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