QuickTime Video Conferencing Camera 100

The QuickTime Video Conferencing Camera 100, later referred to as the QuickTime Conferencing Camera 100, is the first webcam marketed by Apple Computer.

Announcement
The camera was announced on February 12, 1995 as part of several media conferencing packages scheduled to ship in the summer:
 * Apple Media Conference Kit for Macintosh ($200) — includes camera and software only.
 * Apple Media Conference Pro Kit ($1,750) — includes the above with a hardware encoder and ISDN adapter board.
 * Apple Complete Media Conferencing System ($6,000) — includes the above with a Macintosh computer and external speakers.

Beta versions of the conferencing kits were observed to be able to deliver good video quality at up to 30 frames per second on a local area network. However, the kits missed their original ship date targets.

Releases
The actual package was named the Quicktime Conferencing Kit (M4490LL/B), which shipped on December 18, 1995 at a price of 289. Volume licensing was available through Apple's Claris subsidiary. The QuickTime Conferencing ISDN Kit (M4585LL/A) contained an ISDN NuBus card that shipped in the first quarter of 1996 at a price of $1750. A PCI version of the kit (M4616LL/A) followed in the next quarter.

Supported formats

 * Video: QuickTime format (,, JPEG, Apple Video codecs)
 * Photos: PICT format (542 x 492 pixels)