Most webcams have an image sensor between 1/4 and 1/3 inches. The Link outdoes them with a 1/2-inch sensor. It's likely why the video quality looks so much better than the competition. A larger sensor can gather more light in a shot, delivering better results in low-light conditions, with better colors and more detail. The Link's video quality pops with a vividness and a sharpness that made my videofeed feel less like I was seeing myself through a digital screen and more like I was peering into my own apartment through a window.

When I'm testing a webcam, I often play with the lighting in the room, both ambient and artificial. I do my best to throw off the autofocus and white balance to see how the webcam adjusts and responds. I move farther back in my chair and wobble around like a bowling pin. I got more oohs and ahhs from my colleagues as they marveled at how smoothly the Link refocused on my face. I've tested a lot of webcams that have jarring autofocus, but not the Link. It's capable of focusing with my face as close as 4 inches (10 centimeters) to the lens, which is closer than I'd ever need to get to a webcam.


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The Link can zoom up to four times, but it's a digital zoom. That means zooming in will create a picture that's more pixelated the more it closes in on a subject. However, this is a 4K webcam, so by supporting such a high resolution, you can zoom in a fair bit and still retain a sharp image. At the top end, the Link supports 4K resolution at 24, 25, and 30 frames per second. For less bandwidth or for a faster frame rate, which makes the video look smoother, you can downscale to 1080p at 50 or 60 frames per second, among other choices.

Most webcams come with pretty awful microphones, but the dual noise-canceling microphones on the Insta360 Link make me sound pretty decent (according to my colleagues). That said, I still prefer a standalone USB microphone like the Blue Snowball Ice.

There's no physical privacy shutter, but the Link deters hackers and weirdos from peeking through your webcam uninvited by automatically spinning its gimbaled head downward, away from you. This happens 10 seconds after the webcam is no longer in use by a conferencing app. When you start a video meeting, the Link perks back up and awakens to begin streaming again (it supports the likes of Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, and more).

The problem? Three hundred bucks is a lot of money for a webcam. It has competition too. There's the Obsbot Tiny 4K, another PTZ (pan-tilt-zoom) webcam that has many of the same tricks (albeit with less polish) for a little less. The sublime Logitech Brio 4K Webcam is frequently under $150 and delivers almost-as-good image quality sans all the motion.

The question is whether you need automatic tracking and gesture control. If the answer is no, then even the slightly superior video quality of the Link isn't enough to justify spending almost twice as much as a webcam like the Brio, which is already an expensive webcam. You can get a great, simple webcam for just $50.

I currently own the ONE X2 and GO 2 from Insta360. Their 360 cameras are top quality, as is their software. When they announced their first-ever webcam called the Insta360 Link on August 2nd, I excitedly ordered it immediately and it arrived 6 days later directly from China.

The Link is available today for $300. That's a lot for a webcam, but it's not overpriced for its quality and features. The Obsbot Tiny 4K, my previous favorite, goes for $269. The Link is tinier than the Tiny, has a ton more features and better video. Streaming and conferencing in 4K isn't always practical, possible or even necessary, but if you want to record rather than go live, it's nice to have. I've awarded it an Editors' Choice, but it doesn't displace another recent Editors' Choice, the Dell UltraSharp Webcam 4K, simply because the Dell is over $100 cheaper. It lacks many of the Link's features, but if you don't need those features or best-in-class image quality you can save some bucks.

Insta360 equips the webcam with a 1/2-inch image sensor, the largest available in a webcam. That plus the company's imaging experience let the webcam produce excellent video in brighter conditions and relatively good video in very little light -- it's still pretty noisy, but that's almost inescapable because, again, physics. By "excellent" I mean you get exposure optimized for your face, correct color and skin tone white balance (at least for my pasty white skin tone) and no wide-angle distortion around the edges.

As with almost every mid- to high-end webcam these days, the company touts AI for its tracking and automatic framing. It's kind of a meaningless claim at this point, but Insta360 has been using AI for its products for years, and the tracking and framing seem to work well in the Link. So there's that.

One reason there isn't much distortion is because the camera doesn't have the 90-degree field of view you see in the usual webcam (its horizontal angle of view is 69 degrees). If you need the webcam to cover a large swathe of your space in a single position, this isn't your best choice. But it's still wide enough to fit the equivalent of two people side by side at a typical desk-to-monitor distance or a small conference room.

The mics on webcams are generally nothing special, and while the Link's don't stand out as exceptional they don't stand out as bad, either. They do support noise reduction, which did a fine job of filtering out my loud air conditioner without making my voice sound compressed or overprocessed.

The webcam comes with four markers you place in the corners of a whiteboard. This allows the camera to identify it in Whiteboard mode, which processes the video to make it easier to read. Deskview mode lets you toggle between the camera pointed at you and pointed down to the desktop; in product briefings I've had the presenter frequently has to use a two camera setup to achieve it. And in 4K, you get a pretty sharp view. In both Deskview and Overhead modes, the image is oriented automatically so viewers see it the same way you do, which can minimize fiddling.

The Insta360 Link isn't the appropriate webcam for everyone, but it's the right pick when the quality of your camera presence matters. Just make sure you can justify the outlay to the person who minds your budget.

Dropping the URL in the settings box and hitting TEST shows the stream just fine, but in the control tab, I get the Webcam stream not loaded message while showing a very functional link (I can click on it and see the stream).

That's hard to say. Honestly, the webcam stuff is an add-on of the OctoPi image in a way and yet the nonce code is from OctoPrint. It might be a nice feature request to have this optional within the config.yaml, methinks.

Another important thing to note is that the "computer icon" that is supposed to show on the camera screen when linked to the computer does not show up. It's just the regular view from the lens. I feel this is probably a problem with the computer not reading the camera. However, what's interesting is when the camera is on and connected to the computer, if I try to toggle to the settings, the camera won't let me and prompts me with the words "busy." As soon as I unplug it, I'm able to use the camera like normal. Is there something I am doing wrong? I feel like giving up but I feel like I am so close. If anyone has any tips on how to troubleshoot this problem, I'd greatly appreciate it!

I tried to see if I could download the original version, but it was not listed on the M50 website. Do you have a link to where I could download that? With the v.20, I also don't see any options between toggling between advanced and free.

I tried to see if I could download the original version, but it was not listed on the M50 website. Do you have a link of where I could download that? With the v.20, I also don't see any options between toggling between advanced and free.

I tried to see if I could download the original version, but it was not listed on the M50 website. Do you have a link of where I could download that? With the v.20, I also don't see any options between toggling between advanced and free. 

Has anyone had success using their iPhone as a webcam with their 2021 G15? I'm having trouble with Asus Link -- first time I linked my iPhone I was able to use it as a second screen, but now the two devices don't seem to recognize each other

We're currently living in the golden age of webcams. As business professionals, educators, and consumers alike take to videoconferencing for their collaborative needs, webcams have become sharper, clearer, and more functional than ever to meet the demand.

Insta360 is best known for making 360-degree, pocket-friendly action cameras -- in case the name didn't give it away -- but its latest innovation marks the company's foray into the bustling webcam market. The Insta360 Link is a compact camera that's powered by a delightfully intelligent AI system and Insta360's infamous gimbal stabilization, with a listing price of $299 to cover all that tech.

Fundamentally, the Insta360 Link is like every other webcam; it's a bite-sized gadget that sits atop any monitor, laptop, or desk setup and connects via a USB-C cable. Its gimbal-like figure separates it from the pack with a stabilized camera that sways back and forth when not in use -- sort of like a bobblehead. The 3-axis gimbal, as Insta360 calls it, allows the camera part of the webcam to rotate left to right, up and down, and diagonally.

On paper, the Link's field of view peaks at 79.5 degrees, which is a smidge narrower than competing webcams that boast ultra-wide lenses. But when you consider the Link's ability to swivel and spin, the shorter viewing distance is easily forgettable. More on that later.

The Link is not as heavy as you'd expect, even with the motorized parts. It weighs 106g which, given its premium, all-aluminum construction, is a pleasant surprise. I tested the webcam on my beefy 34-inch monitor and had no trouble keeping the gadget still and balanced. More impressively, the Link sat just as snuggly on my 13-inch MacBook Air and 16-inch MacBook Pro. In both scenarios, the laptop displays never felt like they were being dragged or weighed down by the webcam. e24fc04721

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