Skip to main content

This $300 webcam does its best to replicate DSLR quality

We’re all looking to up our videoconferencing game these days, and now a new Mac-exclusive webcam claims to be the “first professional webcam.” What does that mean? Well, Opal’s C1 webcam aims to be a DSLR-like camera that attaches to your Mac and attempts to transform your pitiful built-in webcam into something far more powerful.

As reported by Tom’s Hardware, the Opal C1 has some pretty spectacular specs to back up those claims.

The Opal C1 webcam attached to a monitor.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The C1 houses a mirrorless, 7.8mm 4K Sony sensor that sports a 78-degree field of view and hits 60 frames per second. That checks all the boxes for a high-end camera, and it is notably cheaper than connecting a regular DSLR to your computer.

Recommended Videos

For sound, the Opal C1 has a multidirectional MicMesh that takes up over half the the webcam. Opal is promising noise-cancellation, so in theory, the mic will deliver crisp and isolated sound that blocks out background noise.

The Opal C1 sitting against a white background.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

All of that fits into a relatively compact package. The Opal C1 measures 1.97 x 3.07 x 1.81 inches. That is pretty bulky for a typical webcam, but about half the size of a traditional DSLR.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

For internal specs, the C1 houses the Opal Trillium microchip and Intel’s latest 14-nanometer VPU chip. The Trillium microchip can perform “4 trillion operations per second” according to Opal, and combined with the Intel processor, it should have some impressive computational power.

How necessary that will be is debatable, though, since most videoconference and streaming services compress video anyway.

The C1 will launch with Opal’s custom app, which works exclusively with Mac. That makes sense since some of Opal’s founding members are former Apple employees. The app allows you to apply a variety of filters and adjustments to video and audio, including a Bokeh mode that artificially blurs the background, making it easier to focus on you.

Image quality comparisons between the Opal C1 and other webcams.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Windows users won’t necessarily miss out, though. The Opal C1 is still compatible with third-party software.

You can’t buy the Opal C1 just yet. It’s currently in a private, invite-only beta stage. You can, however, add your name to a reservation list to buy a beta model when it releases.

At $300, the Opal C1 is notably more expensive than some of the other best webcams you can buy, but we will have to wait and see if it is worth it.

Caleb Clark
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Caleb Clark is a full-time writer that primarily covers consumer tech and gaming. He also writes frequently on Medium about…
OpenAI opens up developer access to the full o1 reasoning model
The openAI o1 logo

On the ninth day of OpenAI's holiday press blitz, the company announced that it is releasing the full version of its o1 reasoning model to select developers through the company's API. Until Tuesday's news, devs could only access the less-capable o1-preview model.

According to the company, the full o1 model will begin rolling out to folks in OpenAI's "Tier 5" developer category. Those are users that have had an account for more than a month and who spend at least $1,000 with the company. The new service is especially pricey for users (on account of the added compute resources o1 requires), costing $15 for every (roughly) 750,000 words analyzed and $60 for every (roughly) 750,000 words generated by the model. That's three to four times the cost of performing the same tasks with GPT-4o.

Read more
The Dell G16 gaming laptop with RTX 4070 is $450 off right now
The Dell G16 7630 gaming laptop on a white background.

Gaming laptop deals that are truly worth buying usually don't come cheap, but if you look hard enough, you can find offers that will let you enjoy huge savings. Here's a great example: the Dell G16 with a $450 discount from Dell, which brings it down from $1,750 to a more reasonable $1,300. You're going to get amazing value at this price, but if you want to pocket the savings, you're going to have to rush into completing your purchase because we're not sure how much time is remaining before the bargain expires.

Why you should buy the Dell G16 gaming laptop
The Dell G16 gaming laptop is a pretty powerful device, as it runs on the 13th-generation Intel Core i9 processor, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics card, and 16GB of RAM. With these specifications, it won't have any trouble playing today's best PC games, and with its 1TB SSD, you'll have enough storage space for several AAA titles with all of their required updates and optional DLCs. The Dell G16 ships with Windows 11 Home, so you can start downloading and installing games right after unboxing.

Read more
The massive LastPass hack from 2022 is still haunting us
LastPass website on a laptop.

Just when you thought the LastPass breach of 2022 was over, we're still learning just how detrimental the hack was. According to blockchain expert ZachXBT and spotted by The Block, $5.36 million was stolen from 40 users in a string of attacks. This is on top of the $4.4 million stolen in October 2023 and $6.2 million earlier this year in February 2024.

The original hack goes back to 2022 when hackers claimed to have accessed LastPass' data, which contained API tokens, customer keys, multifactor authentication seeds (MFA), and encrypted password vaults. Although no official information explains how the breach happened, it's possible that the hacker responsible gained access to information that aided the breach. Hackers forced their way in despite the password vaults being encrypted because users reused weak or previously leaked combinations. This access, combined with the users' weak or reused passwords, led to the various accounts being compromised.

Read more