| Photography General Interest Neat Photo stuff NOT particularly about Rangefinders. |
08-05-2012
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#301
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Registered User
funkydog is offline
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 338
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"Strobe". What's wrong with saying "flash" to refer to on-camera flash, studio flash, hand-held flash,built-in flash,etc?
Flashlight is synonymous with torchlight so there's no confusion there.
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08-05-2012
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#302
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Stewart McBride
Sparrow is offline
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Perfidious Albion
Age: 61
Posts: 9,752
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Quote:
Originally Posted by funkydog
"Strobe". What's wrong with saying "flash" to refer to on-camera flash, studio flash, hand-held flash,built-in flash,etc?
Flashlight is synonymous with torchlight so there's no confusion there.
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... but then they would have to call themselves Flashers, rather than Strobists ... which seems fair enough now I think about it 
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Regards Stewart
Stewart McBride
My  ... mostly the chaff ... these are a bit better ...
You’re only young once, but one can always be immature.
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08-05-2012
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#303
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Registered User
bigeye is offline
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: New York
Posts: 1,147
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There are 2 major definitions of "analog": one in electronics and one in literature & science. Unfortunately, the term fails both when applied to film cameras.
What is particularly odd about calling a chemical film medium 'analog' is that 'digital' sensors are, ironically, analog sensors (analog signals are processed through analog-to-digital conversion).
The literary/scientific definition of 'analog' would also cross-up the definition - digital cameras are the analog (e.g. similar, substitute) to the "original," film cameras.
It looks like the term originated, or was at least made firm by the popular analog photography users group (APUG, est. 2002) website, within the film community itself, probably as a reactionary joke to the hyperbole surrounding 'digital' at the time? I don't think new folks to photography get the joke.
(My other term-peeve is "airhead BMW"...)
-Charlie
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Anything that is very simple is apt to be sloppy. - Elliott Erwitt
I bought a new camera. It's so advanced you don't even need it. - Steven Wright
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08-05-2012
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#304
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Registered User
stausauser is offline
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Munich/Germany
Posts: 34
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vs.
if it appears in a thread title ...
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Cheers
Bernhard
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08-05-2012
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#305
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Registered User
p.giannakis is offline
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Stafford - UK
Posts: 677
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"Is it a Rolleiflex?" .... for my Ikoflex....
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08-05-2012
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#306
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Pinhole Shooter
JoeV is offline
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Albuquerque, NM, USA
Posts: 1,046
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I just wrote a blog article about this, last week, and have yet to post it.
While I don't as of yet have a good alternative for the word "analogue," I think that the term "Boolean" is a better descriptor for electronic photography than "digital," it being George Boole who codified Aristotlean logic into mathematical symbology that has become the basis of electronic "logic".
When we employ the term "logic circuit," for instance, we are saying that the circuit in question operates under principles of Boolean Logic, which is not necessarily "digital". Truly digital circuits employ Boolean Logic to encode data in numerical form (such as BCD - Binary Coded Decimal, or PCM - Pulse Code Modulation, or the output of an A-to-D converter, a serial bit stream of numerical information), whereas circuits employing logic gates (AND, OR, NAND, XOR, etc.) employ Boolean Logic absent numerical digitalization.
All digital circuits are Boolean, but not all Boolean circuits are digital, digital being a subset of Boolean.
-Joe
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08-05-2012
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#307
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Czesława Kwoka
John E Earley is offline
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Virginia
Age: 66
Posts: 217
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Quote:
Originally Posted by recent CLA
BTW, Gumby.
It's out back...and to the left. 
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I chortled at that 
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08-05-2012
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#308
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Registered User
Spanik is offline
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 386
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Quote:
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There are 2 major definitions of "analog": one in electronics and one in literature & science. Unfortunately, the term fails both when applied to film cameras.
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There isn't any difference between the electronic and scientific version. Both denote something that changes continuous in time. (the literature interpretation as being "vaguely equivalent" is out of this context)
The problem is how it interpreted by those that have no electronics or scientific background.
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08-05-2012
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#309
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-
.... _ is offline
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 104
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Now just a minute, doesn't film capture the electromagnetic waves that hit it? Isn't it therefore an electronic medium just like digital. Analogue is a superfluous label.
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08-05-2012
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#310
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Stewart McBride
Sparrow is offline
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Perfidious Albion
Age: 61
Posts: 9,752
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I think the whole point of language is to convey ideas, and almost everyone understands what is meant by the terms analogue or digital photography, the introduction of boolean is as much of a conceit as bokeh was in the last decade ... people use such words as a pretence
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Regards Stewart
Stewart McBride
My  ... mostly the chaff ... these are a bit better ...
You’re only young once, but one can always be immature.
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08-05-2012
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#311
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Registered User
Spanik is offline
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 386
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Quote:
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doesn't film capture the electromagnetic waves that hit it?
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Well, we could start a discussion on the duality of light as concerning photography. 
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08-05-2012
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#312
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Registered User
Jack Conrad is offline
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,312
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John E Earley
I chortled at that 
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Hasn't PETA put a stop to chortling yet? 
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08-05-2012
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#314
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Registered User
Sejanus.Aelianus is offline
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 626
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Quote:
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Both denote something that changes continuous in time. (the literature interpretation as being "vaguely equivalent" is out of this context)
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Back when I learned electronics, the word analogue was used to denote a computing device that predicted a result by creating a copy, hence "analogue", of a real world interaction. The Wikipedia article seems to echo that definition.
Language, of course, is a constantly moving target. The change in meaning began, I imagine, when people started to produce interfaces between digital (i.e. boolean) circuits and continuously variable circuits, such as continuous frequency amplifiers. It's not a big leap from there to regarding the world as analogue, in other words continuously variable, or digital.
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Sometimes out of focus but never out of bounds...
pIXIS
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08-05-2012
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#315
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Czesława Kwoka
John E Earley is offline
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Virginia
Age: 66
Posts: 217
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack Conrad
Hasn't PETA put a stop to chortling yet? 
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I chortled again.
Now I have to go put another roll of analog in my camera.
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08-05-2012
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#316
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Eugene Zaikonnikov
varjag is offline
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Bergen, Norway
Age: 35
Posts: 2,974
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Spanik
There isn't any difference between the electronic and scientific version. Both denote something that changes continuous in time. (the literature interpretation as being "vaguely equivalent" is out of this context)
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Not quite, they refer to a model of a process, rather than a process itself. In electronics in particular, it's a subject of signal processing with analogue being continuous models and digital discrete.
The signal processing devices thus can be analog or digital. E.g. your turntable is analogue, and CD player is digital. With imaging technology, your granma's Betamax recorder is analogue, while a DSLR is, well, digital.
The term makes no sense when applied to a technology not involving signal processing, e.g. film cameras, ovens, combustion engines and so on. That said I think it's hopeless fighting its misuse.
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08-05-2012
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#317
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Olympus E-M5/Nikon FE
DNG is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Camby, Indiana
Age: 59
Posts: 2,220
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gns
Not all new, and don't get me upset, but funny (at least to me)...
"Glass"
"Soup"
"Wet" prints
oh, and "Giclee (or however you spell it) and "Fine Art Photography"
Cheers,
Gary
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I have used "Soup", and "Wet Prints" for over 30 years!!
I hate to hear the words: Shot, and Shoot, referring taking a "Photograph:.
Guns Shoot, not cameras..
@Apreture64... My avatar must bug you also.. 
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08-05-2012
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#318
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Registered User
acheyj is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: South Australia
Posts: 227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack Conrad
Hasn't PETA put a stop to chortling yet? 
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I would like to chortle PETA.
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08-06-2012
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#319
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Bodger Extraordinaire
Dez is offline
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 576
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MartinP
In this context, it's not even as though analogue was spelt correctly either . . .

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That's an interesting one. In the UK, one would say "analogue" for all applications of the word. In the US, "analog". Myself, I'm Canadian, and therefore torn between the two cultures, so I think most literate Canadians would refer to an "analog computer", but also say that something could be a good "analogue" of something else.
Cheers, eh?
Dez
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08-06-2012
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#320
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Bodger Extraordinaire
Dez is offline
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 576
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sejanus.Aelianus
Back when I learned electronics, the word analogue was used to denote a computing device that predicted a result by creating a copy, hence "analogue", of a real world interaction.
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So by my Canadian definition, an analog computer would create an analogue of the system it is modelling. Lots of strange word usages in Canada: it is probably the only place where "chips" refers to two different foods, called "fries" or "crisps" in other places. Context is required to understand which one is being requested.
Cheers,
Dez
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08-06-2012
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#321
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Registered User
semordnilap is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 681
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Non photo related:
I have the lack of use of the word prepone in American english... I think it would be an excellent addition, and replace the clunky and awkward 'move up' or 'reschedule earlier' constructions.
http://wordsmith.org/words/prepone.html
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