After lunch and killing some time at Walmart, Mark [1] and I headed to Office Depot [2] to check to see if they had any webcams.
QuickCam Third-Party Drivers [3] Michael Holve - Linux QuickCam Page [4] mini-HOWTO Connectix QuickCam color and Linux [5]
After the experiments I did with my digital camera and using it as a webcam, [6] Mark got the itch to do something similar. Like me, he is Microsoft free.
And that's the main problem. Most new webcams are now USB based, and the USB support for Linux is spotty at best, and with that, only with the latest development kernels. Mark and I are still running Linux 2.0 kernels (why fix it when it isn't broken?).
And the one webcam that isn't USB based, the Logitech Quickcam VC, doesn't have Linux drivers—nor is Logitech being generous with programming informtation; they're downright hostile and no information is available. The older Connectix ones (Logitech bought Connectix) are supported under Linux.
There doesn't seem to be any reason why Logitech should keep this information under wraps, unless:
I suspect the truth is “all of the above” to some degree.
[1] http://www.conman.org/people/myg/
[2] http://www.officedepot.com/
[3] http://www.crynwr.com/qcpc/
[4] http://eunuchs.org/quickcam/
[5] http://www.dkfz-heidelberg.de/Macromol/wedemann/mini-HOWTO-cqcam.html