After the camera was connected to the Internet a few years later, the coffee pot gained international renown as a feature of the fledgling World Wide Web, until being retired in 2001.
[1][2] 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.
[3] In 1993, web browsers gained the ability to display images;[4] 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.
[5] 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 Der Spiegel.