
so your satellites get better and better, or if you stick with the lowest cost options for the task, they get cheaper and cheaper

but there's another factor at work still: with dramatically smaller satellites, you don't have to buy an entire launch, you can piggy back on other launches. this was commonplace by 2015, where nanosatellite launches routinely piggy backed on SpaceX launches

rather than paying the FULL price of a FULL rocket, you just have to pay the fractional price of the launch. its still expensive per pound to low earth orbit (current about $1500 per pound to LEO), but prior to that, you couldn't divide the price like that. it was all or nothing

or close to, at least. sometimes you'd share a ride with one or two other satellites. but the price tag was enormous. nowadays there's standardized cubesat launch services.
its not hobbyist cheap, but its still pretty cheap compared to the whole rocket

so nowadays you can launch a 1U cube sat for something like $100k. thats a bunch of money for the launch, to be sure!
but if thats the low-end price tag, lots of companies can launch satellites, and lots do
before, the low end was tens of millions

and so because of the smartphone war, satellites can now be small enough that their launch costs can be accessible to tiny companies, and we can now get basically daily images of the entire surface of the planet because the we can do so much better than in 2005

the math of mere multiplication, using 2005 costs for satellites, is NOT APPROPRIATE for calculating whether its feasible to get daily whole planet imagine, because external changes shift the OPTIONS, and therefore shift the costs

something that might have taken hundreds of BILLIONS of dollars in reality actually takes a few MILLION, because we can do it _differently_ because of the changes in underlying technology costs

this is one of the biggest factors in what's going to happen with the $5-$50/lb price point that we're heading towards with reusable heavy lift vehicles like SpaceX's Falcon Super Heavy/Starship, and Blue Origin's New Glenn

except in this case, the lowering of launch costs means the engineering requirements of the things being put into space can change dramatically
currently, you need to have extremely light weight but durable systems, because launch costs are at least $1500/lb

and light weight but durable means lots of very expensive, complex manufacturing and quality control
but as launch prices drop, you can start to build HEAVIER durable systems using much more common, and much cheaper, manufacturing and QC