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The biggest sensor ever?! - Nexigo Iris 4K

ShortCircuit@ShortCircuit294.6K viewsSep 14, 202213:05
Source
YT
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294.6K
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Description

Thanks to NexiGo for sponsoring this video! You can purchase the NexiGo Iris 4K Webcam at the link here: viraln.link NexiGo's sent us their new Iris 4K webcam for Riley to

Promos

check out. It has a large 1/1.8-inch Sony STARVIS Sensor - the biggest sensor ever in a webcam. Purchases made through some store links may provide some compensation to Linus Media Group. Want us to unbox something? Make a suggestion at lmg.gg ► SUBSCRIBE ON FLOATPLANE: floatplane.com ► GET MERCH: lttstore.com ► AFFILIATES, SPONSORS & REFERRALS: lmg.gg ► PODCAST GEAR: lmg.gg ► SUPPORT US ON FLOATPLANE: floatplane.com FOLLOW US ELSEWHERE --------------------------------------------------- Twitter: twitter.com Instagram: @shortcircuityt TikTok: @linustech Facebook: @ShortCircuitYT CHAPTERS --------------------------------------------------- 0:00 Intro 0:37 Unwrapping the Iris 1:00 Iris walk-around 4:00 A remote?! 4:30 First impressions on image quality 5:16 Microphone test 5:28 PiP mode ft. future Riley 7:07 Past Riley testing Dynamic Range 8:57 Testing different scenes 9:47 HDMI connection and low-light mode 11:32 Auto-track and Auto-framing 12:05 Overall thoughts 12:43 Conclusion

Start
AI OverviewDefault language

The video presents an in-depth unboxing and hands-on evaluation of the NexiGo Iris 4K webcam, highlighting that it features a 1/1.8 inch Sony STARVIS sensor which NexiGo claims is the largest sensor ever used in a webcam. The host walks through the box contents, the build quality, and the physical design, noting the large sensor, the included remote, and the unusual form factor. He explains the intended use cases, contrasting business and personal scenarios, and emphasizes that the camera can operate without drivers thanks to onboard settings stored in the device. Throughout the review he tests both USB 3.0 connected operation and an HDMI uncompressed 4K path, comparing image quality between the two options. The dynamic range, noise reduction options, and HDR capabilities are explored with live adjustments to gain, backlight compensation, and various scene presets. The auto-tracking and auto-framing features are demonstrated, showing how the camera can follow a presenter and adjust framing in a conference setting. The host weighs the value proposition at a given price point, praising the built in controls and AI processing while noting some limitations like potential framing cuts and the need for higher quality low light in certain conditions. In conclusion, the Iris 4K is presented as a feature rich, adaptable webcam option aimed at both corporate and personal use, with an emphasis on ease of use and onboard processing that reduces driver dependencies. The sponsor message is acknowledged, and the host invites viewers to subscribe for more hardware explorations and boxings.

Topics · technology · hardware · video gear · unboxing

Questions answered

What makes the NexiGo Iris 4K distinct from previous NexiGo webcams?
It uses a 1/1.8 inch Sony STARVIS sensor claimed to be the biggest in a webcam, supports uncompressed 4K over HDMI, has onboard AI features like auto tracking and auto framing, and stores settings on the device for driverless operation.