Are glass optics becoming obsolete?

I've always had glass optics, use to then use a lamp at night, then moves to rear addon and IR. However having recently got the Hikmicro Alpex 4k lite, currently on my HW100 and also tried it on my Anschutz. 22LR, i can see me using this more and just swapping it over to different guns, i am really seeing the appeal of digital scopes. Ok might not be as clear on targets, but im not really a target shooter. My local gunshop is seeing more traditional optics being traded in against digital optics. With constant improvements and extra features on digital scopes, will there still be a place for glass? Who has has changed over, from what to what? Curious to find out people's thoughts,?
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I think the prices would really have to come down before they replace glass. I have a DNT TNC335 and it’s every bit as good as the reviews make it out to be. I do however find some of the software problematic for switching from one rifle to the next without having to go to a range. The biggest difference for me is the night and thermal. There are of course other features that are quite good like the LRF being built in as well as having dope cards built in.
The downside is , optical clarity at higher magnification.
 
Not YET, anyway. Are they being used more than ever before, absolutely. However, in situations where it's vital to have rugged, simple & DEPENDABLE equipment that won't ruin your day due to a dead battery, loose wire, zero phone service or invasive moisture, nothing can replace a glass & tube optic (for now, anyway). I mean, in the same vein, did glass optics make iron sights defunct? NO! It just gave us more options. I'd hate to see shooting become a push button affair, removing the art, skill & human factors from the sport of marksmanship.
 
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I do think they will disappear. Not today or tomorrow, but in the future. Every year the camera sensors get better and better, just like in the photo SLR world, where digitals have taken over. Soon, if not already, someone will introduce a scope that is simply a video camera. Wait! They're already doing it in day/night scopes, but no one has gone to just a video camera for a scope. Look how small the camera in your pone is and how it's advanced over time. Now take that same technology and apply it to a scope. No more parallax problems, autofocus, the list is endless of the benefits. It'll come one day.

I think it would have already caught on if makers had stuck to a digital day scope only and not worried about night vision right off the bat. We'll get there, one day.
 
I do think they will disappear. Not today or tomorrow, but in the future. Every year the camera sensors get better and better, just like in the photo SLR world, where digitals have taken over. Soon, if not already, someone will introduce a scope that is simply a video camera. Wait! They're already doing it in day/night scopes, but no one has gone to just a video camera for a scope. Look how small the camera in your pone is and how it's advanced over time. Now take that same technology and apply it to a scope. No more parallax problems, autofocus, the list is endless of the benefits. It'll come one day.

I think it would have already caught on if makers had stuck to a digital day scope only and not worried about night vision right off the bat. We'll get there, one day.
One of the issues is display size. The resolution of CMOS sensors is millions of pixels. But you cannot display that in a tube small enough for a gun. You would require a much larger display for all of the pixels which does not work for applications like aiming in a concentrated view.

Just look at the night vision resolution.