That would be microfilm.
A long piece of film.
In 1888 Eastman's company introduced its first portable camera. Priced at $25, it included enough film for 100 pictures. After shooting the roll of film, the owner sent both the film and the camera to Rochester for processing. For $10, the company sent back the developed prints and the camera loaded with a new roll of film.
Roll film was invented by Peter Houston, a Wisconsin farmer, in 1881 and his brother invented and patented the roll container. A license was issued to George Eastman who designed his Kodak cameras to use the film.
A roll of 100 first class stamps please.
Unfortunately, you can't. The Polaroid 900, manufactured from 1960-1963, used 40-series roll film that was discontinued in 1992. Some people have had success converting the camera for use with 100 Pack film (instant exposure) or standard 120 roll film, but claim results are only acceptable. The conversion is permanent and destroys any collectible value the camera may have.
The camera owner sent the camera back to Eastman with a processing fee of $10. The company would develop the film, print 100 pictures, and return the camera loaded with a new roll of 100-exposure film.
100/6 = 16.6 times
100% or 100/100
There are "miniature," "medium format" and "large format" cameras. A miniature camera uses 35mm roll film. A large format camera uses cut sheets of film. There are many sizes of sheet film but the most popular is 4" x 5". Medium format cameras use roll film that's between 35mm and 4 inches wide. Today, the only size sold by film manufacturers is 2.25" (approx. 6 centimeters) wide and is available in two lengths: 120 and 220. A roll of 220 will hold twice the number of exposures as a roll of 120, but there are a LOT of problems with 220 so it never got popular. News photographers were about the only people who liked it, but a roll of 220 was more than twice as expensive as a roll of 120 so most guys figured, "if a roll of 220 is 2.5x the price of a roll of 120 and gives 2x the pictures, I'll just buy two rolls of 120 and save money." The medium format shooters who really needed long rolls of film went right past 220 to 70mm. There were two ways to shoot 70mm: a back that held 15 feet of film and gave 70 square shots (the 70mm back for a Hasselblad is bigger, heavier and more expensive than a Hasselblad body), and a back that held 100 feet of film. The most popular camera using 100-foot rolls of 70mm was called a Camerz, and it was used in high-volume portraiture - school photographers, mall photo studios and the like.
Roll film replaced camera-speed roll paper. George Eastman's original Kodak came to the user loaded with a roll of camera-speed paper (as opposed to enlarging-speed paper, camera-speed paper was usable to take pictures on). You shot the 100 images on the roll and sent the camera, along with one dollar, to the Kodak Labs in Rochester, New York. There they would develop the paper roll, strip the emulsion from it and bond it to a strip of celluloid for printing. What replaced glass plates was sheet film, for all uses except astronomy. Astronomers continued to use plates because they're more dimensionally stable than film, and they don't sag when you put them in a camera that's tilted back at a severe angle. - - - - - Roll film replaced individual photographic plates, which had already progressed from coated glass plates to emulsion-coated stock. Glass plates were still popular for their comparative clarity. This "film" had a light-sensitive material in a thin layer attached to cardboard, which was developed and transferred to glass for printing.
Not much, there just for making up games. But you can do an acheivment called 'Truly Random!' in which you have to roll a 6 100 times.
90-100%