Trojan Room coffee pot

The Trojan Room coffee pot was a coffee machine located next to the so-called Trojan Room in the old Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge, England, which in 1991 provided the inspiration for the world's first webcam.

The coffee pot, as displayed in XCoffee

To save people working in the building the disappointment of finding the coffee machine empty after making the trip to the room, a camera was set up providing a live picture of the coffee pot to all desktop computers on the office network. After the camera was connected to the Internet a few years later, the coffee pot gained international notoriety as a feature of the fledgling World Wide Web, until it was retired in 2001.[1][2]

Development

The last picture that the webcam ever took, showing a hand about to switch the server off.

The 128×128 px greyscale camera was connected to the laboratory's local network through a video capture card fitted on an Acorn Archimedes computer. Researcher Quentin Stafford-Fraser wrote the client software, dubbed XCoffee and employing the X Window System protocol, while his colleague Paul Jardetzky wrote the server program.[3][4]

In 1993, web browsers gained the ability to display images,[5] and it soon became clear that this would be an easier way to make the picture available to users. The camera was connected to the Internet and the live picture became available via HTTP in November of the same year, by computer scientists Daniel Gordon and Martyn Johnson. It therefore became visible worldwide and grew into a popular landmark of the early web.

Retirement and legacy

Following the laboratory's move to its current premises, the camera was eventually switched off, at 09:54 UTC on 22 August 2001. Coverage of the shutdown included front-page mentions in The Times and The Washington Post, as well as articles in The Guardian and Wired.[6]

The last of the four or five coffee machines seen online, a Krups, was auctioned on eBay for £3,350 to the German news website Spiegel Online. The pot was later refurbished pro bono by Krups employees, and was switched on again in the magazine's editorial office.[7] Since the summer of 2016, the coffee maker is on permanent loan to the Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum in Paderborn.[8]

Spoofs of the Trojan Room coffee machine ranged from the Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol, a 1998 April Fools' Day specification for a communication protocol, to the 2002 video game Hitman 2: Silent Assassin, in which the player can destroy a "coffee camera" in a kitchen as a distraction. The coffee pot was also mentioned in the BBC Radio 4 drama The Archers on 24 February 2005.[7]

gollark: Apioforms is bees.
gollark: What? Why?
gollark: I'm 0.7 because of course dodecahedron.
gollark: I have cyan in as 0.6 insultness.
gollark: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1348jqOLh2mDAZ3uMb-a5hBvkUvQLSaPcbd1k499W02g/edit#gid=0

References

  1. Quentin Stafford-Fraser. "Trojan Room Coffee Pot resources". Retrieved 26 October 2006.
  2. Daniel Gordon, Martyn Johnson. "The Trojan Room Coffee Machine". Retrieved 26 October 2006.
  3. An interesting note is that the XCoffee client actually had two server ends, since in the X Window System the traditional concept of client and server is reversed. So XCoffee was essentially a non graphical program, invocable from a common shell which would use RPC to contact the Camera and then translate the image into X Window protocol commands sent to the X11 Windows Server which would render a window and in turn send callbacks to client for mouse and keyboard actions. This essentially created one of the first digital encoder applications, since the client code's would only serve as a translation between the RPC response and the X11 protocols.
  4. Quentin Stafford- Fraser. "The Trojan Room Coffee Pot". Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  5. "Original proposal of HTMl IMG tag".
  6. Quentin Stafford-Fraser. "Blog post listing media coverage of the shutdown". Retrieved 26 October 2006.
  7. "The Trojan Room Coffee Pot". BBC World Service - Witness. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  8. The World is at your fingertips - History of the Internet, Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum Paderborn

Further reading

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