Logitech Rally AI Cameras show artificial intelligence can actually improve big meeting rooms

Logitech is leaning into AI again, folks, but this time it feels more practical than flashy. The company has announced Rally AI Camera and Rally AI Camera Pro, two new conference cameras designed for large rooms where video meetings usually fall apart. Instead of adding AI just to check a box, Logitech is using it to solve real problems that show up in boardrooms, classrooms, and town hall spaces every day.

What stands out right away is how restrained the design is. These cameras are meant to disappear into the room, especially with Logitech’s new in-wall mounting option. That is a smart move. Meeting technology works best when people stop thinking about it, and Rally AI Cameras clearly aim for that kind of quiet presence rather than attention grabbing hardware.

On the intelligence side, RightSight 2 does most of the heavy lifting. The system automatically adjusts framing in real time, switching between speakers, groups, and grid layouts depending on what is happening in the room. It feels less like a gimmick and more like a camera operator that actually understands meetings. People are framed properly, remote attendees can see expressions, and the awkward wide shots that make everyone look tiny are largely avoided.

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Rally AI Camera Pro takes things a step further with a dual-camera setup and 15x hybrid zoom, which is especially useful in larger spaces. Presenters stay clear, whiteboards are readable, and remote participants do not feel like they are watching from the back of the room. Both models use a 1-inch imaging sensor with a wide field of view, which helps in less than ideal lighting and wide layouts.

There is also a thoughtful focus on the people who manage these rooms. IT teams can deploy and manage the cameras remotely through Logitech Sync, using either USB or a single category cable for setup. That saves time, reduces support tickets, and makes large rollouts less painful. For organizations that already rely on Logitech gear, this fits neatly into existing workflows.

Room analytics are another area where the AI feels purposeful. Rally AI Cameras can detect usage patterns and feed that data into Logitech Sync, helping companies understand how their spaces are actually being used. That can lead to better scheduling and less wasted space, without requiring manual tracking or guesswork. As long as companies are transparent about how they use that data, it can be genuinely helpful.

Pricing is not cheap, but it is fairly reasonable for enterprise hardware. Rally AI Camera Pro is $2,999, while Rally AI Camera comes in at $2,499, and both are under the psychological $3,000 line Logitech likely aimed for. Availability starts in Spring and Summer 2026, depending on the model and color.

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Brian Fagioli

Technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz

Brian Fagioli is a technology journalist and founder of NERDS.xyz. A former BetaNews writer, he has spent over a decade covering Linux, hardware, software, cybersecurity, and AI with a no nonsense approach for real nerds.

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