However you want to judge it, it could have been shot on an iPhone or a full-frame D-SLR on a tripod and post-processed either by a standard app preset or a RAW editor
Not if you hadn't picked that over compressed low res JPEG it couldn't
I also said but lets not let context get in the way of an argument eh?
I'm not arguing. WE are debating.
Then there's computational photography. Again, some interesting issues here regarding the role of the photographer if absolutely everything can be altered in post, but I think that's just intellectual masturbation. The vast majority of people have no interest in altering things in post, even with the tools available today. It really doesn't matter how the image was created.
I agree to an extent. In a way, I can't WAIT for complete automation... utter and complete auto everything and the ability to alter focus and aperture, and perhaps even shutter speed as well as exposure post shoot. Then everyone will be able to take perfect images... technically. Why? Then all that remains as the variable is the subject and what the images are about. Then finally, perhaps we'll start to judge the images by something more important than technical ability.
Steganography? That might be interesting when somebody works out how to make it survive image compression, resizing, etc. I'm not holding my breath.
Been done already. I used to use a digital watermarking system called Digimarc. It withstands cropping, compression, image manipulation etc. To break it, you needed to alter the image to the extent to where I'd probably no longer notice it was mine any way. It worked very well indeed.
There is a real chance that photography might be equally derailed for a number of years, until the digital world achieves an idiom of its own. And one that can be understood by both the academic and working photographer, and more importantly by the end consumer.
I don't think academia give a toss whether it's digital or analogue... but instead about what the work does. The idea of it achieving an idiom of it's own is what the article is about IMO. I've no idea what it will be, or could be, but there's some interesting things going on experimentally: There are quantum cameras that can see around corners, and high speed cameras that can actually slow light down to the extent that you can actually
see special relativity happen! Can you imagine that? A TIME camera that can see around corners?
I'd be very interested in understanding what makes the Adams piece stand above the alternate I have suggested.
Nothing especially, but that's not what you said. You said...
Personally I think it's because many of the early, ground breaking works can't hold up when compared to more recent works; even when compared to the work of amateurs.
So I was expecting you to show me a landscape by an amateur that far exceeds the greatest works by Ansel Adams. By posting those two, you're just demonstrating that it can hold up to more recent works, as you seem to be saying there's not a great deal of difference between them. Well.. kind of you are... as the amateur one is merely trying to copy the aesthetic of Adams and really doesn't have the same sense of grandeur and open, uninhabited spaces, and has that ugly fence in it. Unless the author was trying to make an ironic point about wilderness by including the fence, it's obviously an attempt to create something that LOOKS like an Adams print. Then there's the fact that if it's digital, you've stripped away the skill required to make it, which is something I keep returning to: Once something becomes easy and simple to reproduce, you stop appreciating it.
Also... I have a problem with you choosing a Bruce Barnbaum image, as your argument said that even amateur images are better these days. Barnbaum is quite an established, known photographer and environmentalist. It hasn't helped him in this case however... but still... kind of cheating a bit
