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Polaroid Digital Instant Mobile Photo Printer: Ta-dah!

Polaroid has partnered with Zink to produce the Polaroid Digital Instant Mobile Photo Printer, a mini photo printer with no ink required

Richard Trenholm Former Movie and TV Senior Editor
Richard Trenholm was CNET's film and TV editor, covering the big screen, small screen and streaming. A member of the Film Critic's Circle, he's covered technology and culture from London's tech scene to Europe's refugee camps to the Sundance film festival.
Expertise Films, TV, Movies, Television, Technology
Richard Trenholm
2 min read

In 2007, we Craved the Zink printing system, which plugs into your camera and prints with zero ink involved. Instead, crystals are baked onto special paper and ta-dah! Instant prints. We remarked that this could be the Polaroid of the 21st century. Turns out Polaroid must have been paying attention, because it has licensed the technology and ta-dah! The Polaroid Digital Instant Mobile Photo Printer.

It's a shame that the name is so clodhoppingly clunky because this is an elegant little number. The handy-dandy printer -- let's call it the PDIMPP -- is 120 by 70mm and a svelte 23.5mm deep.

It connects to your camera via USB utilising the ubiquitous PictBridge standard, or wirelessly to Bluetooth-enabled devices. It then prints out business card-sized pictures in roughly the time it takes to say 'Polaroid Digital Instant Mobile Photo Printer' five times. The results are borderless colour images that are dry to the touch as soon as they emerge from the device.

This marks a return to the instant photography that made Polaroid legendary. Polaroid do have a line of compact cameras but good luck tracking it down in the UK, unless you go online. The range features face detection and the increasingly popular smile shutter, as well as a much more useful blink detection.

There's no word yet on UK pricing or availability. Whether people will start carrying PDIMPP devices to pubs, clubs and parties is open to question, but in Crave's experience the handing out of Flickr and Moo cards is on the rise, so who knows? -Rich Trenholm