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"Terry O'Neill, one of the world's most published photographers, has condemned the rapid spread of digital cameras for wrecking the art of taking pictures.
He believes digital cameras are only fit for "amateurs and paparazzi", and that the technology is turning all pictures into "snapshots".
His criticisms follow a week in which Eastman Kodak admitted the film business is declining at twice the speed of previous estimates, while Dixons reported that four out of five camera sales are digital.
Ilford Imaging in Cheshire, the world's largest producer of black and white photo materials, went into receivership in July, thanks to traditional photography's decline.
Digital cameras take pictures in much the same way as traditional ones, but the image is "captured" electronically and stored in the internal memory. The images can be printed out and saved onto a computer or CD."
Read more at Top Photographers condemn digital age
Posted by Darren in our News category on September 28, 2004