Their description:
Product Description
The Polaroid PoGo Instant Digital Camera is the first digital camera and printer combination that is small enough to take on-the-go. The digital version of Polaroid’s iconic instant camera, the Polaroid PoGo Instant Digital Camera is a full-feature digital camera with an integrated printer. The 5.0-megapixel digital camera with 4x digital zoom has a 3.0-inch LCD screen, an SD memory card slot for saving pictures, and a number of picture enhancement features includ… More >>
Go & get it here - i can recommend it:
Polaroid CZA-05300B PoGo Instant Digital Camera

The camera is very cool and the pictures come out nice bur I am very dissapointed in the size of the camera. In this day and age when cameras come as small as to fit in your pocket this enormous camera feels like it was created in the 70’s. Not to sound paranoid but as with other new products I have a funny feeling that a slimmer and smaller version is slready prepared so Poloroid acn reintoduce the “new and imrproved” version next holidy season. For those of us who got suckered into buying this one? Too bad, huh?
Battery life is very short. Only can take about 10 pictures. Picture quality is poor. It is not stable. I won’t recommend anyone to buy it.
I have been using various Polaroid cameras for years to support geology fieldwork. It’s great to be able to take pictures in the field, print, and stick them directly in one’s field notebook. I started with the “teenie” I-Zone Camera but moved to the Olympus/Polaroid Camedia C-211. The latter might have been the first and only digital camera that included a built-in Polaroid picture developer. I saw both the I-Zone and the Camedia become obsolete when Polaroid announced it would discontinue the production of film. Hence, I was elated to hear about the Zink-Polaroid Pogo Camera. For what I do it is perfect. It is MUCH smaller than the C-211 and the pictures are of much better quality. However, as noted elsewhere among these reviews, the camera is a “bare-back” minimal camera - no zoom, two settings (close-up and landscape), and very little battery life (I got about 3 hours out of mine). I have had issues getting focused images out of the “close-up function” - it’s little improved from the point and click I-zone in this regard.
If you are a scientist or engineer in need of a convenient in-the-field-prints camera this is the best it gets - however, don’t expect a sleek, small, fast, high-resolution, great zoom piece of art. It is not.
I am generally surprised to see how little advertisement I have seen for this camera. Most people have never heard of it and alarmingly, the originally flashy sales setups that appeared when it first came out have all disappeared. Indeed, two of the major retailers here in North Carolina who slated to sell the camera no longer do (although they still sell the individual printer). I suspect this camera might either be followed up by a MUCH more advanced version soon OR will be discontinued.
I would opt for the printer-only version of this gadget (a quarter the price of the camera+printer) at this point and wait for the Pogo 2.0 - assuming there will ever be one.
We wanted to take a picture of our patients to include in their file for identification purposes. After looking at several rather expensive options we decided to try a digital camera and the Polaroid Pogo printer. It worked great for us and with the sticky back on the photo we could mount it right on the patient folder. When they announced the camera/printer combo was coming out I started watching for its availability. Just like the convenience of the original Polaroid it’s point, click, print.
We have 2 of the Pogo Instant Cameras and take anywhere from 10 to 50 photos a day. Other than the paper being a little bit pricey (which is offset by not having to buy expensive hardware and supplies for alternative solutions)everything about the camera/printer is great for us - handy, easy to use, low initial cost.
I don’t think I would use this camera for vacation photos but for our need it is just perfect.
I bought this camera to use to make a picture guest book at my wedding reception and it worked great. I did plan ahead & have it located near an electrical outlet. It worked fine & took pictures & printed while it was plugged in.
IT was GREAT! Picture quality is better than the old Polaroid, but not quite comparable to other photos. It’s fun because it’s sticky.