Are Microsoft's newest webcams the last of a dying breed?
By Tim Conneally, BetaNews
May 13, 2008, 3:28 PM
Microsoft today has announced the pricing and upcoming availability of its LifeCam VX-5000 Windows Live-optimized webcam.
Expected to reach the market in June, the VX-5000 features a dedicated Windows Live Call button, which allows Windows Live Messenger users one-touch access to their "Contact Picker" (i.e. buddy list.) The included LifeCam Dashboard acts within Windows Live Messenger, allowing pan, tilt, 3x digital zoom, face tracking, and video effects to be used in-call.
The 640 x 480 VGA camera with 1.3 megapixel still picture capability will retail for an estimated $49.95.

External webcams are practically a thing of the past, with an increasing number of low-end notebooks offering built-in cameras with comparable functionality. Intel's Classmate PC, for example, which is in the ULCPC class of computers, (deliberately low-power and cheap) offers a 640 x 480 .3M webcam. A few years ago, a built-in camera was a premium feature.
Considering the shrinking camera footprint -- as evidenced by Micron's 2 megapixel imaging system on a chip that measures only 0.2" and can capture 15 frames of video a second at full resolution -- Microsoft's LifeCams are downright huge.






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