That might be a MacOS version discrepancy but I do feel for whatever reason, it is not properly supported at the hardware level. On your Mac, go to Apple icon in Upper Left Menu Bar Click App Store Search for Webcam Settings Buy (7.99) Open Note: Webcam Settings will not be in Dock. To prevent your Mac from recognizing your iPhone as a camera or microphone, even when your iPhone is plugged in and mounted, you can turn off Continuity Camera: On your iPhone, go to Settings > General > AirPlay & Handoff. One thing I spotted while researching was about the Mic issue, it talked about changing the sound settings on the device:īut, on my Mac that Format drop-down is non-editable: To add it back, plug your iPhone into your Mac and mount your iPhone. It seems to me like it's surely a driver issue but I cannot see Logitech provide drivers, and MacOS doesn't seem to recognize webcams as a category in Settings. Open the FaceTime app on your Mac from the Dock. Features True hardware level control of your webcam. Make sure you’ve connected your webcam to the Mac over USB and simply follow the steps below to get started. It reports as a microphone but didn't work as one.Īlso: maybe a non-issue but my webcam device name is reported as "HD Pro Webcam C902 #2" - why #2? Some apps have a drop-down showing two cameras, this one and. Webcam Settings allows you to adjust settings including the exposure time, contrast, saturation, and white balance temperature for your webcam, whether it’s a Built-in iSight, a more recent FaceTime/FaceTime HD Camera or an external USB webcam. For Mac users, you can download the macOS Webcam Settings app (opens in new tab) from Mactaris through the app store for 7.99 (around £5.50 / AU10.50). I tried the Logi Capture app as suggested and it presented more settings but none helped.Īlso: audio doesn't work on it. Even in a Skype test window or camera settings, it lags about a second and is very jerky. I run a 2012 Mac mini using a Logitech C920 HD Pro USB 1080p Webcam with it.
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