I gave up buying film cameras, film and developing back before digital was fashionable. The cost savings with a digital camera were astronomical back then, and still are today. Film processing is all done as well as stored on my computer, which has good points and bad points. The good points, already mentioned. However the bad point is that your photos are now all on a hard drive, and hard drives fail. When I saw my photos starting to fade and otherwise deteriorate I rushed to change them to digital. All the things that I did as a kid were converted, things my Dad and I did together, the first rabbit I was able to bag with my Daisy Red Ryder, all the fish we caught on our excursions to Minnesota and Wisconsin, all my Army pictures to include Vietnam, different people I knew and were friends with to include my best friend Amy who was a MP and killed in the line of duty, early pictures of my son growing up all digital. All was well until one of the discs on the hard drive came apart and destroyed all the data on the drive as well as making it unrecoverable. This was before there was such a thing as a cloud and all backups were done on hard drives where data was routinely backed up, but not things like photos. Lesson learned was never to trust anything that has anything to do with computers without being able to back things up, even stuff that is sup secure in the cloud.