

I tried playing around with my lighting to see if I could create a more dynamic picture, but RightLight 4 thwarted me at every turn, evenly-lighting me no matter how dramatic I tried to make my lighting. Unfortunately, RightLight 4 is still trying to do this even in very ideal lighting situations, which is why my well-lit setting looks kind of flat. One of the features Logitech is touting with the Brio 500 is RightLight 4 - the most recent evolution of Logitech’s RightLight technology – which uses face-tracking and other factors to make sure the subject is evenly-lit in less-than-ideal lighting situations. This isn’t really an issue that will concern most people - a flat, evenly-lit image is, for the most part, a best-case scenario when it comes to webcam performance. The Brio 500 does produce a flatter, less-dynamic overall image than other webcams we’ve tested, such as the Insta360 Link. Ten years from now, this camera's hardware will be the standard in all devices at minimum.The Insta360 Link has the best auto-white balance we’ve seen, but the Brio 500 comes pretty close.

This is why someone use this camera for television look so good while their stream is live.you get what your pay for. What matters here is that the combination of a better sensor and hardware platform will permit things like 1080p 60fps, and full HDR. Most people won't go 4k for another ten years. It just works right out of the box, and doesn't require fiddling to work well. Lots of people return the webcam right out of the box before they realize that settings need to be adjusted.

The sharpness must be set manually, because it comes out of the box blurry and the colors washed out. The live light is annoying, and you can't turn it off. This requires a higher performance computer with USB 3.0 or better, and a decent GPU. Much greater resolution, color space and sensor size.
