The first webcam was created to solve a very British problem: wasted trips for empty coffee ☕💻 Which makes it just perfect for us at PubChat as we all love a coffee of three in the morning. It also helps fit in with our mantra of general knowledge you didn’t think you needed to know
🎥 The First Webcam (1991)
- What: A live camera pointed at a coffee pot
- Where: The Trojan Room, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
- Who: Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Paul Jardetzky
- Why: So researchers could check if there was any coffee left before walking down the corridor
🖥️ How it worked
- Initially ran on a local network (not the internet)
- Captured black-and-white images
- Resolution: a glorious 128 × 128 pixels
- Updated three times per minute
🌐 Going global
- In 1993, it was connected to the World Wide Web
- Became the first live webcam viewable online
- Suddenly, people around the world were checking on a random British coffee pot
☕ The end of an era
- The webcam ran until 2001
- When the lab moved, the coffee pot was switched off
- The pot was later auctioned on eBay for charity
🧠 Why it matters
- It wasn’t about surveillance, influencers, or meetings
- It showed:
- Live video over a network was useful
- The web could be real-time, not just static pages
- Live video over a network was useful
- Many consider it the birth of webcam culture
🏆 Fun fact
The creators described it as:
“A solution to a problem nobody outside Cambridge knew they had.”
From coffee pot to global video calls — all because someone was tired of disappointment.