Most amateur photographers are front end focused - it's all about the gear. A few even admit they're not especially interested in the outcome, and couldn't take a great photograph to save their lives. The camera is a toy to play with, and that has always been the case. For every Barnack Leica sold to a Cartier-Bresson, they sold a thousand to a dentist to photograph kittens and sunsets.
In film days every image ended in a print or a slide, and there was a clear difference between an enprint from the chemist and a hand printed 10 x 8. Now a tiny fraction of the photographs taken finish up as hard copy, and that's true of film photographs. Most are viewed on line. There's almost nothing aesthetically between an iPhone, a good compact and a professional DSLR shot to 99% of people viewing it.