Saturday, 21 January 2023

Digital Photographic Volume Explosion: Losing The Tree in the Wood!


A Dutch artist Erik Kessels  has unveiled an exhibit which features a million photos that were uploaded to Flickr, Facebook and Google over a 24 hour period.

 


On our recent visit to India, I took about 500 photos and 50 short videos. We were there for only twenty days. My wife also took approximately the same amount if not more. It is true, we attended two family weddings, both in very picturesque cities. We also visited one of world’s most beautiful and most photographed monument; Taj Mahal. But even after making allowance for these, 50 photographs per day seems a lot!  

As you might have guessed all these snaps were taken on our phones. The cameras on recent phones are so good that in quality they can even compete with many high-end and large free-standing cameras. The mobile phone is almost always at hand. We, like many others have completely stopped slugging a separate camera even on our holidays.

The ease of use and constant availability means that most of us are taking a large number of photos. As these photos and videos taken on phone are so easy to share, we end have collecting even more. This has given rise to two major problems, quality control and storage.

In past before this digital revolution, the films and their processing were costly, we took a great care in choosing the subject, fussing about light and composing the scene, In a year I wouldn’t have taken more than hundred photos. At least one third of those, if not more, would be discarded after the prints came back. These photographs were personal and were shared with only few close family and friends.

And then came the digital photographic volume explosion when mobile phone married the digital camera. Initially their resolution was low but soon that improved. My first mobile phone with camera had a resolution of 2 megapixels and the present one has 108 megapixel! With this kind of resolution each photograph takes a lot of storage memory.

Because it is so easy to click, at no immediate cost and instant gratification, we take multiple photographs of anything and everything almost compulsively. At that moment we think, we would edit them later and discard the unwanted but most of us never accomplish that with the rigor and vigour required to do so. The result; the ever increasing need for storage memory and a lot of poor-quality and irrelevant photos. According to one estimate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2.5 million gigabytes of data is being added every day, a good chunk of which is from mass digital photography*. Our phones, laptops are easily getting filled up and even online storage is becoming problematic.

As we are snapping more and more banal and mundane things, we lose the sight of what is wonderful, life enriching and special. If Gold was available with the same abundance as Coal, will it still be cherished and valued as much?

*https://news.mit.edu/2021/dna-data-storage-0610

2 comments:

Mrs Nirmal Gupta said...

A good thought about unnecessary and excessive photos clicking on i phones etc. What can be used and reused data wise. Some suggestions. Decide who would click photos day wise between the two of us. Clean up or improvise the photos at the end of the day( clean up act). One can use an app ( to be purchased) to delete double acts orunwanted photos. But I agree clicking photos has become a habbit.

Prem Kumar said...

Good suggestions Nirmal, but I am afraid, I am not very disciplined. I take too many snaps of any interesting object that I latch on. Later while trying to edit and delete I find most of them appealing for one reason or another.