Haven’t read Part 1 yet?
👉 Start with THE EARLY YEARS — A Camera, a Kid, and a World Learning to Focus
PART 2: The Digital Years — When Photography Learned to Think
When photography crossed into the digital age, it didn’t tiptoe. It burst in the door, arms full of memory cards, megapixels, and more confidence than a toddler wearing a superhero cape.
When the Delete Button Became King
Digital photography brought us the most empowering (and dangerous) innovation: the Delete button. Before digital, every shot mattered. After digital, every shot was… negotiable.
The Megapixel Wars
Manufacturers waged a battle of numbers — 5MP, 7MP, 10MP, 12MP — each promising NASA-level precision. Meanwhile, iconic photos throughout history laughed quietly from their low-resolution frames.
The Rise of Digital Point-and-Shoots
Compact, charming, and occasionally confused about what to focus on — these pocket cameras introduced a generation to photography.
The Smartphone Era
Then came the revolution. Cameras jumped into phones and evolved quickly. Your phone suddenly knew how to fix exposure, sharpen images, and detect your dinner. Today, my Pixel 9 is proof of how far we’ve come.
Mirrorless Cameras: The Silent Revolution
Sony’s mirrorless leap reshaped photography — faster autofocus, lighter bodies, smarter technology. And as the Sony ecosystem exploded, the need for beginner-friendly guidance grew.
Why This Story Matters
The Digital Years changed photography forever — but the heart of storytelling, curiosity, and joy remained the same. That’s the spirit behind LensDude.
Next up: Part 3 — The Modern Years (How LensDude Was Born)