The COVID-19 pandemic turned video conferencing from a "perk" into a lifeline. Practically overnight, it became the primary way the world attended school, saw doctors, and went to work. This era also introduced "Zoom fatigue," as we learned that constant virtual interaction, while efficient, has its own unique mental toll. Video conference History - VAVS - JCU Australia
: AT&T wowed the public at the New York World’s Fair with the Picturephone Mod I . Despite the "cool factor," it was a commercial flop due to its massive cost and the requirement that both parties own the expensive hardware. The Corporate Era (1980s – 1990s) VIDEO CONFERENCING
Cloud-based platforms like (2011) and Microsoft Teams (2017) began to simplify group meetings, focusing on ease of use over specialized hardware. The Global Standard (2020 – Present) The COVID-19 pandemic turned video conferencing from a
Long before the internet, inventors like those at imagined transmitting images over wires. In 1927, AT&T successfully broadcast a live image of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover from Washington, D.C. to New York. While the viewers could see him, he couldn’t see them—it was a "one-way" start to a two-way vision. The World’s Fair and the "Picturephone" (1930s – 1970s) Video conference History - VAVS - JCU Australia
: Steve Jobs introduced FaceTime on the iPhone 4, fulfilling his childhood dream of the futuristic calls seen on The Jetsons .
brought the first webcams and desktop software like CU-SeeMe . Suddenly, a grainy, grayscale image on a computer screen was possible for tech-savvy individuals, moving the technology out of high-end boardrooms and into academic labs. The Mass Adoption (2000s – 2019)
The "story" of video conferencing is a century-long journey from a science-fiction dream to a global necessity. It isn't just about software; it’s a narrative of humanity’s persistent desire to see and hear each other, no matter the distance. The Early Dream (1870s – 1920s)