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Here's a snippet from another article on the transition from film to digital photography:
'As the digital revolution sidelines film, the photo industry is having to rely more heavily on high-margin services and supplies — inks, chemicals, paper — that go into making prints.
Yet the picture is not quite as it seems.
While there’s no hint of a falloff in the desire of Americans to freeze-frame the world around them, the overall number of images converted into prints has been slipping since the dawn of the 21st century.
The drop-off coincided with the lightning transition to a world without film. A few years ago, there wasn’t a framework in place to help digital shutterbugs print easily or cheaply.
Digital cameras are now in about 43 million homes in America, and that 40 percent penetration could reach 70 percent by 2007. The more mainstream they become, some analysts argue, the more likely that old printing habits will re-establish themselves.'
Read more at Digital photo revolution: New directions for business - April 3, 2005
{News}
Posted by Darren in our News category on April 04, 2005