I think the OP was talking about the two ways get a print on RA4 paper, not inkjet.
That's certainly how I understood it, yes.
And the question interests me, because so far, my conclusion is that there is some intangible attractiveness of an optically made RA4 print, but that this attractiveness has never really been put into words in a convincing manner, let alone operationalized along objective lines. Yet, I do see some practitioners (photographers and/or printers) remaining or even becoming very dedicated to optical enlargement, which suggests that there's something
there.
By extension, I'm also curious about how RA4 print (digital or analog) relates to other means of (color) printing, along similar lines. Again, I see lots of preference, and not a whole lot of convincing argumentation. I feel that such argumentation should be feasible to construct based on the collective experiences and attitudes of photographic artists. But to my surprise, very little of this knowledge is actually used in the marketplace.
To illustrate, I was at a major photo fair in my country about a week ago, and of course looked with interest at the choices for printmaking of the works on display. Concerning color prints, the number of optical enlargements or artworks that successfully exploit the 'analog' nature/pedigree of RA4 paper was extremely limited. In fact, I could just about count them on two hands. The rest was apparently digitally fashioned (sometimes visibly so, sometimes it was possible to infer this from contextual information), and within that realm, there was surprisingly little effort being done to distinguish RA4 prints from inkjet prints. The marketplace as it functioned on that particular fair also did not seem to favor either option in terms of price point or prominence in presentation, nor was any particular emphasis put on material choices. To illustrate the latter, of the RA4 prints I saw, there was precisely *one* gallery that took the effort of actually mentioning which paper they used (and they were unsure about how exactly it was finished). The rest kept it at a brief 'C-print' on the tag, leaving us to guess at the rest.
And of course, the vast majority of prints were inkjets, mostly on Hahnemühle paper. Whatever objective and/or intangible motivations there are to play into, Hahnemühle is doing it far better than any other manufacturer. The paper was mentioned, but nobody bothered mentioning which inks (apart from vacuous statements like 'archival pigment' etc.) were used - which to my mind would be at least as relevant as knowing which brand marketed the paper.
So it's a very relevant question that
@mtjade2007 asks here, with significant economic and artistic impact. But also a question that seems very difficult to move past the level of poorly substantiated personal preferences, human-nature related dichotomies such as progressivism vs. conservatism and sensitivity to endless repetition of superficial claims put forth by 'authorities' in the field.
Sorry to sound somewhat cynical in the above, but when it comes to the future of analog photography, the future of RA4 paper, and perhaps even the
printed photograph to begin with, it seems that the vital questions as of yet remain without a satisfactory answer. And that's a very risky proposition.