Back to the film negatives and start againmousemeat wrote: well...if the EMP pulse clobbers us, then there will be no more episodes to watch...lol
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Oh yes and we'd lose all the sound!!
Back to the film negatives and start againmousemeat wrote: well...if the EMP pulse clobbers us, then there will be no more episodes to watch...lol
I'm on some Blakes 7 groups and sites, which (since it is a 1970s-80s show) go back to the beginning of the internet. Being a TV show, lots of the sites were image-heavy with some irreplaceable photos and images not least from fan gatherings, but also proper art, together with manipulated photos/memes and the like. And some witty and erudite essays and reviews, some from fans who have since passed away. Sadly, the electronic "Dark Age" (that doesn't apply to books) has robbed us of many of these works and pages, the WayBack Machine is not very good at storing images or "sub-pages" beyond a main site.denis rigg wrote:Interesting topic, this reminds of how some admins sometimes inform their users about data loss. Once upon a time I was on a fashionable website Gallery.ru on the topic of "images", and at some point their hard drive broke, which they could not rehabilitate (the popularity of the site immediately fell). But the most frightening thing can be with your personal hard drive or hosting, where your site is located. Moreover, as for the second, your site may fall due to such a seemingly simple situation as replacing hard drives with people from the hosting. They begin to change and at some point something may break.
bottom line...nothing is forever...lol......One thing I do admire...is how crisp b/w picts from the 40's, etc...still look....unlike similar color photos..which tend to bleed and get murky looking...denis rigg wrote:Interesting topic, this reminds of how some admins sometimes inform their users about data loss. Once upon a time I was on a fashionable website Gallery.ru on the topic of "images", and at some point their hard drive broke, which they could not rehabilitate (the popularity of the site immediately fell). But the most frightening thing can be with your personal hard drive or hosting, where your site is located. Moreover, as for the second, your site may fall due to such a seemingly simple situation as replacing hard drives with people from the hosting. They begin to change and at some point something may break.
Yes, monochrome is much more stable. At least in the pre-digital age. Hence preferred for technical studies. I enjoy watching monochrome films more, for similar reasons of clarity and "immediacy". After a short time my brain just ignores the lack of colour, like it ignores the lack of three dimensions, the edge of a frame, smell, touch and other senses... I'm dumbfounded that some young people can't get over the lack of colour, when all the riches of sight and sound are on display.mousemeat wrote: bottom line...nothing is forever...lol......One thing I do admire...is how crisp b/w picts from the 40's, etc...still look....unlike similar color photos..which tend to bleed and get murky looking...
Frankymole wrote:Yes, monochrome is much more stable. At least in the pre-digital age. Hence preferred for technical studies. I enjoy watching monochrome films more, for similar reasons of clarity and "immediacy". After a short time my brain just ignores the lack of colour, like it ignores the lack of three dimensions, the edge of a frame, smell, touch and other senses... I'm dumbfounded that some young people can't get over the lack of colour, when all the riches of sight and sound are on display.mousemeat wrote: bottom line...nothing is forever...lol......One thing I do admire...is how crisp b/w picts from the 40's, etc...still look....unlike similar color photos..which tend to bleed and get murky looking...
It isn't only young people. From the mid-seventies onwards my mother has refused to watch anything in not in colour, her reasoning being that she didn't spend all that money on a colour set to watch in black & white. It caused a few family arguments over the years.Frankymole wrote:After a short time my brain just ignores the lack of colour, like it ignores the lack of three dimensions, the edge of a frame, smell, touch and other senses... I'm dumbfounded that some young people can't get over the lack of colour, when all the riches of sight and sound are on display.
Maybe why it was more popular in the cinema, at least for a time, than on TV. I think the only 3D thing I saw was the Dr Who 50th anniversary story in 2013, on the big screen. It was okay but I don't feel I missed much watching it in 2D subsequently.Ian Wegg wrote: Interesting point about the frame, hardly anybody mentions that. All attempts to introduce 3D television have failed because of it - 3D can never work unless you can get the picture to fill your entire field of vision, it seems strange to me that few people seem to realise that.
I remember in the 50's, when some films came out in 3D....like ' god' and ' It came from Outer Space ' " house of wax '....overall, it didn't look all that bad...many complaint was wearing those darned glasses....and of course, some theaters didn't quite get the projection process quite rightFrankymole wrote:Maybe why it was more popular in the cinema, at least for a time, than on TV. I think the only 3D thing I saw was the Dr Who 50th anniversary story in 2013, on the big screen. It was okay but I don't feel I missed much watching it in 2D subsequently.Ian Wegg wrote: Interesting point about the frame, hardly anybody mentions that. All attempts to introduce 3D television have failed because of it - 3D can never work unless you can get the picture to fill your entire field of vision, it seems strange to me that few people seem to realise that.
I remember someone saying that watching English football (soccer) in 3D on the telly looked like miniature men on a table kicking a small pea around!