subject: If Usb Webcam Comes, Can Optimally Intimate Communication Be Far Behind? [print this page] You know most webcams will connect with a USB cord or something similar. Make sure you locate it on your computer. It's usually on the front or the back of the computer, and looks just like it should -- like a tiny rectangle ready to receive your USB cord. Well, beyond suspicion, the USB Webcam serves your needs to the hilt and contributes to your convenient and effective communication.
You know, the USB webcam connects to a universal serial bus (USB) port of a personal computer and send video images to a browser that requests the images from the computer. Universal Serial bus (USB) connections provide a flexible and adaptable method for connecting peripheral devices to computers. The ability of USB devices to "plug and play" as well as the wide array of USB devices available make USB devices a common staple of computing accessories. USB Webcams typically include a lens, an image sensor, and some support electronics. Image sensors can be CMOS or CCD. CMOS image sensors, when compared to charge-coupled-device (CCD) arrays, provide a low cost imaging semiconductor solution for USB Web Camera and other optical sensing devices.
A web camera system consists of a video camera plus software that runs on a personal computer to periodically upload an image from the USB webcam to a web page. Software running on PC functions to periodically upload the captured video image to an Internet web page. The basic purpose of a web camera system is to post a reasonably live picture on a user-specified web page. Many USB webcam systems upload images on a periodic basis; for example, uploading an image once per hour. Using the Internet connection, the captured video information is transmitted from the personal computer of one user over the Internet to a personal computer of another user. Unlike more expensive analog or Digital Web Camera for recording images on tape, PC cameras typically do not include a viewfinder. There is inherently a time delay between the point at which an image signal is supplied by a PC camera and the time at which the image is displayed on a monitor.
As USB webcam capabilities have been added to instant messaging, text chat services such as AOL Instant Messenger, one-to-one live video communication over the Internet has now reached millions of mainstream PC users worldwide. Improved video quality has helped webcams encroach on traditional video conferencing systems. New features such as automatic lighting controls, real-time enhancements (retouching, wrinkle smoothing and vertical stretch), automatic face tracking and autofocus assist users by providing substantial ease-of-use, further increasing the popularity of USB webcams.
If winter comes, can spring be far behind? If USB web cam comes, can your friends or your significant other be far behind? Whoever you are and wherever you are, your optimally intimate communication is no longer in a fools paradise on the strength of the unique and useful USB webcam.