Note: Rez, that's not how it's supposed to work. I got the message, myself, and I'm editing my response to include this. Happens all the time, but I've never lost anything. You might have some high-up security setting on your browser.
I have tons of albums and tons of CDs, John, and I'm happy with either of them. I have about 50 albums for the cover artwork and 0 CDs for same.
I didn't mean to imply that there wasn't a market, just that there aren't people shelling out thousands of dollars on a regular basis for relatively obscure albums. I own several LPs because that's the only way they're available, and they're arguably highly collectable for various nostalgic reasons. But I paid about ten bucks apiece, and doubt the price will ever go far up or down (ignoring inflation).
If you're talking about "originals" for newly created comics, I totally agree with you about comics being created digitally. However, if you're including old comics and scans of same, I have 25.000 comics and perhaps ten scans and I can honestly say that I've looked at each scan ONCE to get a piece of information and it was not a pleasant experience (for me). I think it's not a minority who can tell the difference there.
That's because we're not quite there, yet. Even ten years ago, a lot of us were laughing at people buying CDs because they weren't good enough, yet. That changed, and sooner than later.
Again, for new comics, that's likely, but I've yet to see an old comic converted to vector graphics with ANY success - of course that could EASILY be a function of my not looking very hard rather than what's actually been done out there...
I was, actually, talking about new books, because the new material will point the direction for reprints.
That's probably more because nobody does it by hand. A mediocre artist with a tablet or touchscreen could probably vectorize a few pages per hour, which is only a little slower than the scan restoration that some people do around here regularly.
As far as automated processes go, it's designed more for logos than artwork, but VectorMagic is probably today's state of the art. From the results I've seen, their algorithms could probably be tweaked to do...no worse a job than we currently see otherwise, ignoring the colors, where they seem to do an intentionally bland job.
(I don't have much real experience with image processing, but it seems like it'd be much easier to have higher fidelity--you turn each group of same-colored pixels into a vectorized blob. It might not give the smallest possible file or smoothest curve, which is what most people want, but it should certainly do the desired job here.)
Again if you're talking about new comics, I am totally and blissfully ignorant. But, applying this to GA scans - people ARE using JPEGs, John. And the scans (here at least - I have no experience with other sites) leave a hell of a lot to be desired when compared to an actual comic book (IMHO - and absolutely NO disrespect intended to the scanners).
I agree, and was mostly extrapolating. The scanning units will increase resolution (actually, they already have--the resolutions we see seem to be more of a file size/screen size tradeoff, typically). Vectorization will become a tool involved in the work (hopefully not the automated conversions). Compression or bandwidth might improve to allow bigger file sizes.
As those things happen, we're going to get the digital resolution past the tiniest dots you can get on newsprint. At that point, it's an eyestrain issue, not a quality issue. But there are advances coming down the pipe in the field, as well.
Plus--and this is what Ken was getting at, I think, when all the new comics are digital files floating around, the market for the paper versions will be devoid of nostalgia. In turn, that kills off most of the speculators, because they can't very well speculate against themselves for very long. At that point, the paper market collapses to just people who'd like to read a story that hasn't already been reprinted multiple times, like those of us here.
I love PDFs. I think it's possible to present very high rez files at a reasonable file size. I should try it out and report back on the file size comparison... I should be able to present full 300 ppi scans in a pdf which can support pan and zoom and still retain good detail. Interesting thought process you've engendered.
I didn't mean to knock PDFs, just their use where plain text would do far better. For example, I won't buy from any company that makes me download a catalog rather than let me see it right on their website. It tells me that they don't understand how a web browser works, and there's little chance that their shopping cart works right.
However, for reading offline material, it's harmless. I do have some technical issues with the number of features it offers, but that's certainly not relevant to this discussion or probably of interest to you.
That's all I need - ONE more project. I've got to begin work on Hames' and my next Great Unknowns column (spotlighting Emil Gershwin) just as soon as I get ImageS #11 off to press.
Heh. I know the feeling. There are too many really good ideas to fool around with, and only a handful are likely to pay the bills. I've got management systems, community currency systems, galleries, newspapers, research agents, and games, not to mention books and classes, all coming out of my ears.
On the bright side, it keeps the day interesting.