We live in an era where we produce millions of files with names like this every single day. In the 1990s, a photo was a physical object, curated in an album. Today, a photo is a data point.
The aperture and ISO would tell us if the room was dimly lit by a bedside lamp or strobing with club lights.
Whether it was captured on an iPhone, a Samsung, or a dedicated DSLR changes the "texture" of the memory. The Philosophy of Digital Overload