

- #LOGITECH QUICKCAM ORBIT AF REMOTE CONTROL SOFTWARE 1080P#
- #LOGITECH QUICKCAM ORBIT AF REMOTE CONTROL SOFTWARE DRIVER#
You could of course tilt the lens upwards when the camera head is stationed directly in the base unit, but then the video gives the appearance of looking upwards at people in the video conference, which would be awkward. You can connect the camera head onto the long stem or you can ditch the stem and connect the camera head directly onto the base unit, but you do lose the benefit of the camera point at eye level. The long 9" stem is essentially a mini USB extender. Logitech Quickcam Orbit AF Logitech BCC950 ConferenceCam Both the Orbit AF and the BCC950 sport Carl Zeiss optics, but the real similarity is the usage of a long 9" stem that lets you mount the camera up high even if placed on a table, so the video feed is at eye/face-level. The BCC950 appears to be the offspring of the Logitech Quickcam Orbit AF, which I reviewed way back in 2007. I was very impressed with the feature-set and performance. I tested the BCC950 ConferenceCam on a Windows 8 圆4 desktop PC with an Intel i7 3.07Ghz processor and 16GB RAM.

#LOGITECH QUICKCAM ORBIT AF REMOTE CONTROL SOFTWARE DRIVER#
It uses UVC H.264 so no driver installation is needed on PCs or Macs to get up and running.
#LOGITECH QUICKCAM ORBIT AF REMOTE CONTROL SOFTWARE 1080P#
The Logitech BCC950 ConferenceCam actually fills a niche between large room conferencing systems and computer webcams, offering a plug-and-play videoconferencing system that sports a Carl Zeiss lens, 1080p HD video, 30 fps, high-quality omni-directional microphone/speakerphone with a range of 8 feet, and the ability to pan, tilt, and zoom from the unit itself or the included remote control.

These USB cameras often have the same if not better optics than higher-end video conferencing camera models but at a fraction of the cost. The Logitech BCC950 ConferenceCam is an innovative product marking a trend away from high-end in-room video conferencing systems toward smaller, inexpensive video systems that leverage desktop PCs or laptops, along with inexpensive USB cameras.
