It's sooooo impractical but the results are so fun.
The process is to compose, focus, put ND filter on, swap from finder to film body, half-fire the shutter, pull out the dark slide, fully fire the shutter, push in the dark slide, eject the film, rewind the shutter, and go back to the finder.
One brings to mind the common misconception of the young that all physical media (including dad's CDs) is analogue, and that 'digital' refers only to 'computer' data.
Digital Tax! Digital camera! Digital marketing! Digital distribution! Digital radio! Digital TV! Digital download!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:PrefixIndex/Digital
All of these had previously had a digital component to them. It was just the proximal user-facing part being digitised (or the introduction of a computer) that gave the marketing department license to use the word 'digital'. Maybe it was over-cooked a bit.
ETA: AAMOF, we called them Digital Cameras when they first arrived.
Laserdiscs are analog.
I think chemical film process fits with that description.
You can make a camera out of a cardboard box really. That won't do for a wildlife or olympic games professional photographer obviously.
Thats just like, your opinion, man.
You’re not going to get 1/1000+ shutters and all that though.