Sunday, 18 December 2011

Connectix QuickCam

The first known commercial webcam, the QuickCam, entered the marketplace in 1994, created by the U.S. computer hardware and software company Connectix, which later sold its product line to another U.S. company, Logitech, in 1998. QuickCam was originally the design of Jon Garber, who wanted to call it the 'Mac-camera', but was vetoed by Connectix's marketing department which saw the possibility of it one day becoming a cross-platform product. It was to become Connectix's first Microsoft Windows product 14 months later when QuickCam for Windows was launched in October 1995. The Macintosh QuickCam had shipped earlier in August 1994, and could only provide 320 x 240 pixel resolution with a grayscale colour depth of 16 shades at 60 frames per second, which would drop down to 15 frames per second if it was switched to a less basic 256 shades of gray (8-bit).[5]
The QuickCam had earlier started as a graduate degree research project in the early 1990's between various California and East Coast universities, and was originally designed with an RS-232 serial port connector color CCD camera. Both the Apple and Windows software versions were sponsored by DARPA and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The Windows software version was compiled under bothMS Visual Studios and Borland C/C++ compilers for both Windows 3.11 and Windows 95. Videoconferencing via computers already existed, and at the time client-server based videoconferencing software such as CU-SeeMe had started to become popular.
The initial QuickCam model was available only for the Apple Macintosh, connecting to it via its serial port, and was sold at a cost of $100. In 2010, Time Magazine designated QuickCam as one of the top computer devices of all time.

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