Somehow, I knew I wasn't going to make any friends by comparing smartphones and Polaroids... I guess we'll have to agree to disagree but before I leave this thread:
- the appeal of Polaroids was precisely the instant sharing. The fact that now the cicrle of friends and family has extended from those around you to the whole world changes nothing. And having traveled to regions of the world where a smartphone and an internet connection are still luxuries, I sometimes wished I had a Polaroid with me...
- the technical specifications of smartphones are better that those of an Instamatic, but so is a Nikon D810 compared to an F. If Polaroids and Instamatics produced crappy results, it is mostly because the photographers weren't good at what they were doing. Unfortunately, I do not see any changes here either.
You omit so much:
1. Polaroids used
consumable film that continued to cost the consumer money forever;
2. Smartphones are able to take thousands of photographs without ever spending an extra dime;
3. Polaroids produced a
single, tiny, square image ... that, once given away, was irreplaceable;
4. Smartphones take images that can be shared
an unlimited amount of times, with the original being
kept by the user;
5. Polaroid images could only be immediately shared by those in the area (if you were on a trip, you'd have to physically mail each image to your friends and family);
6. Smartphone images can be instantly shared, all over the world, in seconds, with no added postage or hassle in packaging/driving/mailing them;
7. Polaroid images were noticeably tiny and lousy;
8. Smartphone images rival (or surpass) those produced by low-end cameras, they can be printed up to A2 size, and the quality has been good enough to grace magazine covers;
9. No one had cell phones back then, so in order to take photographs during the time period you reference, users
had to buy "something" extra;
10. Everyone has a cell phone now,
already equipped with a high-end camera, with
more user-friendliness than any camera on the planet.
In short, no one really "needs" an extra camera these days.
Thus, when you narrow the difference in quality between a smart phone and an entry camera to "negligible" ... and when you increase the cell phone's superior functionality and user-friendliness to "exponential" ... in a market where every thinking person below the age of 40 already has a cell phone ...
you destroy the low-end camera market ... which is exactly what's happening right now.