In my earliest days of recording oscilloscope traces I had to use a Polaroid with b/w film. By around +/-1983 IIRC we started using HP scopes that connected to plotters thay copied the traces on to paper with ink pens. Later on, floppy disks and microdisks ...
I've got one of those stupid things for a Tek 465 in a box here. It's in the "Go to hamfest" pile, even has some 669 with it.
The last time I used a Polaroid was around 2001 with macro tubes trying to locate photon emissions (hot spots) on a uP die while cycling through test patterns on a prober. Really long exposure times. I had to cloak the prober in thick black cloth so no external light could interfere with the exposure. Our Quality Group owned the equipment but ironically didn't have the skill set/ambition to use it, so I figured it out and did it myself. I forgot about that group until this Polaroid conversation. I was urked about it at the time, it was supposed to be one of their functions.
Look at it this way - you got to use a piece of technology that probably no one will ever see again.