2023-01-24 16:13:28 -07:00
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title: Photography
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date: 2023-01-23
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---
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Downstairs, in our basement,
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we have boxes and boxes of old photographs that we inherited.
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We're not sure what's in the boxes:
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we only have this vague notion that they're valuable,
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because somebody spent time and money on them.
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This is a really lousy situation for us to be in.
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What are we supposed to do with these?
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Could they be useful someday to our grandchildren?
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Is this just the output of somebody's hobby,
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with little to no value to anyone else?
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How many generations must hang on to these before it's okay to discard them?
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## Hobby photography over the years
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My grandparents would get one photograph taken of the whole family,
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maybe every 10-20 years,
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if you were lucky enough to have a traveling photographer drop by your house.
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So you cherished that photograph,
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and you thought about your great-grandchildren seeing this marvel of modern technology.
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Most of the photos we have from this era
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have hand-written notes recording the year,
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the location,
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the people involved,
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and maybe some additional context like
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"this house was built by Peter and his father in 1885".
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By the time my parents had disposable income,
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you could get a camera for a reasonable amount of money.
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The film cost money,
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and getting prints developed cost money,
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so they made sure everybody was lined up,
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facing the camera,
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and smiling,
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before pressing the shutter button.
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But because you could pop off 26 shots at a time,
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and because the film would actually degrade if you didn't develop it quickly,
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they took a lot more pictures.
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They probably didn't have time to label all of them,
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and anyway, that was just some dumb thing their parents did.
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My generation saw digital cameras pop up
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right around the time we were shopping for more expensive cameras.
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You could see the photo you took immediately,
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so people would take another shot when they saw that somebody had their eyes closed.
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We started taking more candid snapshots,
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and we didn't sweat it when we accidentally photographed a shoe or something.
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We had to stop thinking of one photo as being a sort of investment:
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you could take 20 photos and then just pick the best one,
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and there was no difference in cost.
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Then, we stopped picking the best one,
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because we were busy.
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## The problem with digital
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These boxes of prints downstairs have outlasted every hard drive I've ever owned.
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And as someone whose job is reverse-engineering undocumented file formats,
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I am not holding my breath that in 500 years anyone will know what to do with a JPEG,
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much less a JPEG on a FAT32 file system on a SATA hard drive.
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In fact I am pretty confident that the time we're living in
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will come to be seen as a dark age,
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about which little is known,
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because people stopped writing things in places that were easy to preserve.
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We currently have 44,708 digital photos and videos: about 419 Gigabytes.
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With a few exceptions of things I've scanned in from prints,
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the oldest photos we have are from October 2000.
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That's around 2000 photos every year,
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once we had a baby and we really got going photographing every damn thing.
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There's a multi-year gap before that,
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and there are holes after October 2000,
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because I accidentally deleted the wrong directory.
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Photos I took before around 1998 are downstairs in one of those boxes of prints.
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2023-01-24 16:16:52 -07:00
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*I have already permanently lost digital records!*
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2023-01-24 16:13:28 -07:00
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## Getting this under control
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Someday,
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hopefully soon,
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we're going to go through all 44,708 photos,
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and file them away into a few categories:
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1. Photos we're going to make physical copies of,
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and place in an album,
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with some sort of annotation about why it's significant.
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2. Photos/Videos we're going to group together,
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along with some sort of annotation about why that group is significant.
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This might be a photo album,
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or maybe just a directory or box.
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3. Photos/Videos we're going not going to do anything special to,
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with a note that these are "just in case",
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without any special meaning,
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and our progeny can feel okay throwing them out.
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4. Photos/Videos we don't want to keep at all.
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We're then going to have to sort through these hundreds of prints,
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trying to decide
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on behalf of our ancestors
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why the photo was taken.
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We'll have to file each one in the same categories.
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At the end of this,
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we'll have actual photo books,
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with written text explaining what's significant.
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I hope this leaves future generations with a better situation
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than the context-free boxes of prints that we inherited!
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## Why I'm doing this
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I love this old silver-gelatin print
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of my grandfather's entire family.
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They're all gathered in front of their 900 square-foot house,
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with my grandfather showing off the family's new bicycle.
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Also in the photo are the family dog,
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and their cow.
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My hope is that
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people in the future can pick up one of my albums,
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spend a few minutes going through it,
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and get a feel for what we looked like and how we lived.
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They'll be encouraged to actually do that,
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because of the *limited amount* of stuff,
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the *easy interface* to viewing it (namely: posess eyes),
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and the *context* I will have provided.
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As a result of thinking about this for so long,
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I've noticed I stopped taking so many pictures.
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A lot of the pictures I do take are sent immediately and not stored:
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my great-grandchildren don't really need to see this burrito,
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or our dog on the table.
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Maybe eventually I'll get back to storing only a few dozen photos per year,
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and the future albums will be very quick to put together.
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