- Cloud Networking
The Guide to Cisco Meraki Adaptive Policy
28 Dec, 2025







£87.13 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £72.61 ex-VAT, this Lenovo webcam is a solid “get people seeing properly without fuss” option, especially if you’re deploying a handful of users and want a model that won’t feel cheap in daily video calls. The USB‑C angle is the big practical win in real offices: fewer adapters, less desk clutter, and it generally behaves better with modern laptops than older USB-A setups (which tend to be fine, but you often end up fiddling with cables). If your team’s using Teams/Zoom/Meet all day, you’ll care more about reliability and ease of setup than bragging rights—and Lenovo is usually decent on that front.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it as a “premium video” upgrade for exec rooms or content-style calls. It’s priced like a functional business cam, not something designed for flattering low-light performance or heavy conference-room use, and it’s not going to replace more purpose-built conferencing kits. If you’re equipping reception, frontline staff, trainees, or remote workers who just need to be clearly heard and seen, it’s a sensible buy. If you’re trying to improve image quality significantly in dim rooms or need wide coverage for larger groups, you’ll likely be happier spending a bit more (or choosing a camera aimed at meeting-room setups).

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkVision MC50 - Webcam - colour - 1920 x 1080 - audio - USB 2.0 - MJPEG, YUY2

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkVision MC60 - Webcam - colour - 1920 x 1080 - 1080p - audio - USB 2.0 - MJPEG, YUY2

Lenovo
Lenovo Essential - Webcam - colour - 1920 x 1080 - 1080p - audio - USB 2.0 - MJPEG, YUY2 - DC 5 V

JABRA
Jabra PanaCast 20 - Webcam - colour - 13 MP - 3840 x 2160 - audio - USB 3.0