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Just before Christmas in 1948, Edwin Land sent fifty seven polaroid (instant) cameras to a shop for sale. All of the cameras were sold on the first day. His company's name was Polaroid, because he invented the polaroid camera.
The best place for information on the Polaroid Spectra cameras is camerapedia.org.
It depends on how good of picture quality you want. For highest quality I would get a Canon EOS 1Ds Mark II DSLR Camera along with a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro Lens. If you can not get very close to your subject you might want to go with a Canon EF 180mm f/3.5 L USM Macro Lens. The best setup would cost around 9,000 to 10,000 dollars. If you do not have a huge budget I would go with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi with a Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM lens. Which would run around 1500 dollars. Both setups would give you higher picture quality than of a point and shoot digital camera.
A lens with a focal length of 60mm to 100mm (APS-C sized) are great for macro photography. An Ultrasonic Motor (USM) is useful in macro photography is it enables quick, quiet and accurate auto focusing. Image Stabilisation is unnecessary in macro lenses.
You could pair this word up with just about anything else except for "camera" (e.g. macro lens/shot/flash/capable/work/setting/photo etc.) To the best of my knowledge, there is no such thing as a "macro camera". If you're trying to determine what macro images are, this definition hails from the old days of film: it is an image where the ratio of the recorded image size to the actual object size is from 1:1 to 10:1. In other words, the image recorded on film is the same size as the object (1:1) or is up to 10x larger than the object. If you go beyond 10:1 you have branched into photomicrography. Anything less than 1:1 is "close up" photography.