I use to love digital. Although I spent most of my life in the Age of Film, I never progressed beyond snapshot photography (maybe I still haven't). I was an early convert to digital, and upgraded through a series of compacts, bridge, the DSLR cameras, before I discovered the delights of car boot sale film cameras a few years ago, and then the wonder of home developing b/w film.
I recently tried to return to a bit of digital. Spruced up the Sony A200 DSLR, bought it a few accessories. I think that I was reading too much that the gear isn't important, and trying to rise to the challenge that a good photographer uses any camera or technology, in order to get the results.
Thing is, I failed - I still haven't used it much. The DSLR sits on the camera shelf again, gathering fresh dust. I guess that I discovered that the gear and process is important to me. When I need a fast colour digital image, I shall use it, but right at this moment - I'm still not passionate about a return to digital. Just pressing an electronic shutter button, and firing off five hundred binary files, just doesn't scratch my itch anymore - so to speak. Not only that, but I don't like the aesthetics of those shiny happy images.
I prefer the gear, I like the process, and I like the results.