LifeSize Room 200 review
Think serious video conferencing kit has to cost a fortune? LifeSize looks to bring down the cost of high quality video conferencing to more attainable levels.
Great HD video quality is the next best thing to really being there, every capability is included as standard, and the cross-compatibility makes for a very flexible system. The price is still relatively high, but you get a lot of videoconferencing capabilities for your money.

We did notice some artefacts when finely detailed objects moved, but static objects were very finely detailed and clearly HD quality. The circular microphone array picks up audio all round the room, too, and therefore isn't particularly phased by objects interfering with the direct path to speakers. So everyone in the conference room can speak freely, as they would when talking to people who are actually there.
But the system comes into its own even further when you add participants. Bandwidth permitting, the Room 200 can deal with up to six video streams simultaneously, all at 1080p. Since only one video feed will be passed upstream, and available downstream bandwidth is usually many times faster, this is even feasible over fast broadband.
Thanks to the high resolution, you can easily hook up conference rooms full of people at each end. Further adding to the possibilities, there's a PSTN socket on the codec box. This can be plugged into a regular phone line hosting an audio-only teleconference, so your whole company can join in.
Since the Room 200 relies on the H.323 teleconferencing standard, it will talk to non-1080p LifeSize systems such as the keenly priced Express 200, plus devices from other manufacturers and even webcam users. It integrates with both Cisco Call Manager and Microsoft OCS, as well as SIP. The codec box can transcode lower quality streams for lower quality participants at the same time as handling 1080p, so someone on a webcam using MSN doesn't pull everyone down to their quality level.
The LifeSize Room 200 is still a relatively expensive system. But with everything included in the box, it brings fully featured 1080p videoconferencing down to a more affordable level. For medium-to-large companies which need boardroom video facilities, but were unwilling to pay the 50K+ price previously associated with this, it could be just what you're looking for
Verdict
Great HD video quality is the next best thing to really being there, every capability is included as standard, and the cross-compatibility makes for a very flexible system. The price is still relatively high, but you get a lot of videoconferencing capabilities for your money.
Resolution: up to 1080p30 video Compression: MPEG-4 H.264 AVC video (H.261, H.263, H.263+ and H.239 compliant), AAC LC audio (G.711, G.722, G722.1C, G.728, G.729 compliant) Data rates: 128Kbits/sec – 6Mbits/sec (point-to-point) or 2Mbits/sec (multipoint) Videoconferencing standards: H.323, SIP, Microsoft OCS, Cisco Call Manager Video input: 2 x HDMI, DVI-I, analog component, S-video, composite Audio input: 2 x stereo line, microphone minijacks Video output: DVI-I, HDMI (up to 2 simultaneous displays) Audio output: stereo line minijack Other: PSTN, USB, 2 x Ethernet, RS232, PTZ camera
Get the ITPro daily newsletter
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2025 report - the leading guidance on AI, cybersecurity and other IT challenges as per 700+ senior executives
Dr James Morris has worked as a technology journalist for over 25 years, including spending nine years on the staff of market-leading computer magazine PC Pro, the last five of which were as the publication’s editor. He specialises in enterprise-grade software and hardware, with a particular focus on content creation. He launched a pioneering video channel for HEXUS.net in 2006 and ran the video reviews channel for TrustedReviews.com for four years. He also runs a successful online digital content and commercial video production company, t-zero communications Ltd.
Dr Morris is a prolific technology writer and contributes commercial content for major IT brands including AMD, BlackBerry, Dell, Cognizant, HP, and IBM. He published a book on artificial intelligence, Can Computers Create Art? in 2009. He is also an academic, and is currently Pathway Director of the MA, Interactive Journalism at City, University of London.
Previously, he was course leader for the BA in Web Media Production at Ravensbourne University. He has a PhD in Philosophy, Art and Social Thought from the European Graduate School in Switzerland, a Master's in Media Arts from the New School in New York, USA, and a Bachelor's in Social Anthropology from the London School of Economics.
Dr. Morris can be found on Twitter at @Cyberwest, or emailed at j@tzero.co.uk
-
Cleo attack victim list grows as Hertz confirms customer data stolen – and security experts say it won't be the last
News Hertz has confirmed it suffered a data breach as a result of the Cleo zero-day vulnerability in late 2024, with the car rental giant warning that customer data was stolen.
By Ross Kelly Published
-
Women show more team spirit when it comes to cybersecurity, yet they're still missing out on opportunities
News While they're more likely to believe that responsibility should be shared, women are less likely to get the necessary training
By Emma Woollacott Published
-
OpenAI wants developers using its new GPT-4.1 models – but how do they compare to Claude and Gemini on coding tasks?
News OpenAI says its GPT-4.1 model family offers sizable improvements for coding, but tests show competitors still outperform it in key areas.
By Ross Kelly Published