DarkNacht wrote:That is also digital.
My point precisely. "Paper" and "digital" are not mutually exclusive. Every digital signal needs an analog representation to exist in the real world. To treat them as a dichotomy confuses the discussion.
DarkNacht wrote:That is also digital.
loftar wrote:DarkNacht wrote:That is also digital.
My point precisely. "Paper" and "digital" are not mutually exclusive. Every digital signal needs an analog representation to exist in the real world. To treat them as a dichotomy confuses the discussion.
trungdle wrote:You probably need too much paper for a small ammount of data
trungdle wrote:and even so you still need a nerds or a machine to translate it.
MagicManICT wrote:Speaking of the merging of paper and digital.... we're forgetting that Thomas Edison invention of circa 1890s, the punch card! (no it wasn't digital then, but was adapted to digital by early computer systems.)
As far as music goes, we've had ways of expressing music on paper since the Ancient Greeks, and videos are nothing but a way of recording live action. We've also been recording that for millennia. You're arguments, sir, fail.
MagicManICT wrote:(no it wasn't digital then, but was adapted to digital by early computer systems.)
trungdle wrote:MagicManICT wrote:Speaking of the merging of paper and digital.... we're forgetting that Thomas Edison invention of circa 1890s, the punch card! (no it wasn't digital then, but was adapted to digital by early computer systems.)
As far as music goes, we've had ways of expressing music on paper since the Ancient Greeks, and videos are nothing but a way of recording live action. We've also been recording that for millennia. You're arguments, sir, fail.
I beg to differ. First off, sound is not only music. Secondly, video is not a way of recording live action. I pretty much think it is the ONLY way... fundamentally, because that is how you define a video: a record of live actions.
So, to record a natural sound, an accent, a bird, etc. And to capture moving video we still need digital devices.
I do however agree that the data can be stored on pretty much all material, provided it is hard enough to keep the data.
Mr_Bellflower wrote:
HolyLight wrote:If you think you need digital devices to record sound, you really really should stop trying to argue a point.
Well unless the digital age started in the 1850's lol
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