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CamPass

Share one Mac's Webcam to another Mac

User Experience
Apple
Webcam
Visit WebsiteSee on Product Hunt

Hunted byNorthbound House | Zac and ChadNorthbound House | Zac and Chad

CamPass lets one Mac use another Mac’s webcam over your local network. Use your iMac camera for calls on a MacBook, add a webcam to a headless Mac mini, or get a better angle in any multi-Mac setup. Encrypted, low-latency, and completely local.

Top comment

CamPass started with a very specific frustration in my own setup. I use a MacBook Pro as my primary computer, but I also have an iMac that I often use as a second display through AirPlay. It works really well for giving me more screen space, but the moment I join a Teams or Zoom call, I’m stuck using the MacBook’s webcam from a terrible angle. The iMac is already directly in front of me, with its camera positioned exactly where I want it, but macOS does not provide a way to use that camera on the MacBook.

I searched for a solution for years. I asked in forums, tried different workflows, and kept checking to see whether someone had finally built a simple way to share a camera from one Mac to another. I found plenty of tools for using an iPhone as a webcam, connecting an external camera, or sending video over the internet, but nothing that solved this particular Mac-to-Mac problem cleanly.

Eventually, I decided to build it myself.

CamPass lets one Mac share its webcam with another Mac over the local network. On the receiving Mac, the camera appears as a normal virtual camera that can be selected in Teams, Zoom, FaceTime, Google Meet, and other video apps.

My original use case was using the iMac camera for calls on my MacBook, but while building it, I realized there were several other situations where it could be useful. It can add a webcam to a headless Mac mini, or simply let someone choose the best camera angle in a multi-Mac workspace.

Privacy was also important to me. CamPass runs entirely across the local network, does not require an account, and does not send video through a cloud service. The connection is encrypted and designed to keep latency low enough for normal video calls.

CamPass includes a seven-day free trial, and the full version is a one-time purchase rather than a subscription.

This is still a new product, so I’m especially interested in hearing how people use it, which Mac setups they try it with, and what would make it more useful. I’d genuinely appreciate any feedback, questions, or feature ideas. Feel free to comment here, or reach out at [email protected]!

Comment highlights

Love that it stays completely local instead of routing through some cloud relay. Such a thoughtful solution for anyone with a Mac mini tucked away or a lid-closed setup on their desk.

Would love a virtual camera driver option so CamPass shows up as a regular webcam source in Zoom or OBS instead of needing a dedicated window open. That would make the multi-Mac angle trick way smoother for stream setups.

Finally a fix for the awkward MacBook-on-a-laptop-stand angle problem. Pulled my iMac camera over to a quick call and the latency was honestly unnoticeable.

About CamPass on Product Hunt

Share one Mac's Webcam to another Mac

CamPass was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 8 upvotes and 7 comments, placing #160 on the daily leaderboard. CamPass lets one Mac use another Mac’s webcam over your local network. Use your iMac camera for calls on a MacBook, add a webcam to a headless Mac mini, or get a better angle in any multi-Mac setup. Encrypted, low-latency, and completely local.

CamPass was featured in User Experience (366.8k followers), Apple (15.5k followers) and Webcam (396 followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 38k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.

Who hunted CamPass?

CamPass was hunted by Northbound House | Zac and Chad. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.

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