• CIWS-30@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I remember reading about how Kodak tried to block digital cameras (even its own) so as not to compromise their own film business, only to be caught unprepared later on when the digital camera revolution came anyway and then took massive losses.

    It’s funny how they build the first.

    • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Then later they almost shut down their entire consumer film production because of digital cameras. So they were right in thinking it would massively impact them, but made some very wrong choices because of it.

        • awesomesauce309
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          1 year ago

          So suppressing the next big competing technology just put their company behind after it became ubiquitous? Is there a lesson to be learned here? I don’t have time to figure it out—somebody’s gotta mine all this coal.

      • espentan@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s a bit like discovering electric lighting and brushing it under the carpet, since your candle factory is blooming, while thinking/hoping that no one else will ever see a future for electric lights.

        It must be one of the biggest faux pas in corporate history.

    • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I read an interesting analysis: We as consumers just see pictures, but to them they were a chemical processing company. That didn’t translate at all to digital pictures in any way like corporate experience, mindset, technical expertise, etc. It would have been hard to mentally make the change before it hit them in the face.

    • sv1sjp@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Tapes can save A LOT of information digitally. I have some tapes from 1990s in digital8 and each one was 8-10gb of raw data when I digitalized them. The quality was insane. Ay the same time, 00s digital cameras came with mini dvds on SDs with max of 1-2gb, so they had to compress them in lossy formats

      • oddspinnaker@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Plus, the TV used to display the photo may also be helping it look better since old TVs had thin black lines alternating between the display lines (scan lines).

        This has the effect of smoothing out a lot of the more jarring edges of pixelation in old video games, for example.

  • Docandersonn@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    It’s worth noting this is the first commercially available digital camera. The digital camera aboard Landsat 1 (launched 1972) was developed in 1969, predating this by 6 years.

    • Crul@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      EDIT: I looked at the wrong instrument. See comments below to read about the MSS, “the oldest operational multispectral digital sensor”

      This is what I see from a quick search. According to Wikipedia page Landsat 1 - Sensors:

      ERTS-A had two sensors to achieve its primary objectives: the return beam vidicon (RBV) and the multispectral scanner (MSS).

      And from Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV) Overview:

      The Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV) sensor utilised vidicon tube instruments containing an electron gun that read images from a photoconductive faceplate similar to television cameras. The data stream received from the satellite was analog-to-digital preprocessed to correct for radiometric and geometric errors.

      So… if I understand it correctly, it was an analog camera which signal was at the end converted to digital. But please correct me if I’m wrong!

      ninja-EDIT: What happened on 1969, according to The First Digital Camera Was the Size of a Toaster - IEEE Spectrum:

      CCDs […] were invented in 1969 by Willard Boyle and George E. Smith at Bell Labs,

        • Crul@lemm.eeOP
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          1 year ago

          Ok, I looked at the wrong instrument.

          Regarding the MMS, here (page 3) it says:

          MSS sensor, the oldest operational multispectral digital sensor

          Then I found this diagram (with some explanations on this link):

          If I understand correctly, that means it has a 6 pixel-row resolution that it uses to scan a 2D area.

          Finally, I realized I was using a wrong idea of “digital camera”. There is no true “digital sensor”, all sensors are analog and always need a postprocess to convert to digital… right?

          As always, it’s impossible to provide a non-ambiguous definition. Is a 6-pixel row res instrument on a satelite a “digital camera”? … kind of :)

          Anyway, fascinating topic. Thanks for the input!