If you’re just starting out with a digital camera, or you are considering buying a new camera, and you like what you’ve heard about digital photography, you probably have a few burning questions about the technology. What replaces the film? Do you need a computer? What process replaces getting your pictures developed, and how can you store and view all your photos without having to print them off? This is a short guide that will answer these questions, and give you an idea about what your options are as far as storing, retrieving, and viewing your digital photographs goes.
When you take a picture with an optical film camera, you have a shutter opening for a fraction of a second, exposing photosensitive film to the light which is projected into an image by the lens, onto the surface of the film. The film stores a negative color impression of your image. Later it is fixed then developed into a positive true color photograph in a dark room (or these days, a compact machine which performs the same task.) When you’re done, you get a copy of the fixed negative, and the true color photo. The principle of digital photography isn’t much different. A...