Camera setup was a breeze. There are two methods currently, one involves resetting the camera into setup mode where you use your smart phone to let the camera see a QR code that then allows the camera to connect using your selected WiFi network. The second method, the one I used, you simply connect to the camera's own local WiFi once it powers up and then use the YoLink to app configure it from there. Note that the camera only supports 2.4 GHz WiFi.Once connected, the camera shows up like every other YoLink device in the app with its own widget showing the last image seen and its WiFi signal strength plus online status. Clicking on the widget opens up a live view of the camera (yes, it works remotely, you don't need to be on the same network) with mic/audio, motion arrows for changing the camera's view, and a lot of other settings you can configure, including video resolution, stored video recordings, video flip (for mounting upside down), snapshots, etc. You can also configure multiple "favorite" view positions so you can easily point the camera at different things while live streaming. Camera motion via the app is smooth and responsive. Camera motion is completely contained, meaning nothing swings out past the device housing during movement, which is nice if you have limited space options or have things near the camera housing.The camera comes preinstalled with a 64 GB Lexar microSD card. This can be replaced with a microSD card up to 128 GB in capacity. I replaced mine out of the box with a Samsung Pro Endurance 128 GB card because I plan on leaving it recording 24/7. Note that when formatting the card, the app is not very good at giving feedback on how long the process will take or how long it has left to complete. When I formatted the newly installed card, the whole process took about 1 minute and the only way I knew it had completed was when the app storage capacity finally updated to 119 GB total.The camera had a firmware update available immediately upon installing, which I applied. This is one thing I don't like about YoLink - they often have updates available, but you don't know unless you check (there's no setting to automatically inform you of this). And when you apply them, the feedback on how long the process will take or even if it has completed is not great. The app still showed an update is available even after the camera had rebooted itself and it wasn't until much later that the app finally synced that the camera had been updated.Stored 24/7 video is easy to access and peruse via the app even when viewed remotely. The camera can be configured to record full time (24/7) or only when triggered by motion/person/audio detection. The camera imprints a date/time stamp in the upper right corner of the video and currently this cannot be changed.Motion, person, and sound detection sensitivity settings range from off, low, moderate, medium, high, and critical. Person detection is just OK, not great and will sometimes trigger when there is no person present.The camera has adequate 2-way audio and it will announce things, such as when it first boots up and connects to WiFi. It won't win any audio fidelity awards, but voices are clearly discernible with a slightly tinny sound due to audio stream compression. Audio volume is controlled by the app and at the highest setting has some static and clipping but is clearly heard even in a large room.Night vision is good, but not great. This isn't a high priority for me, so I'm not deducting from the rating, but if night vision is critical to you, it may be an issue. It can be configured on, off, or automatic.Mounting options are somewhat limited - there is a plastic base plate that the camera can slot into which is supplied with 3 screws & drywall anchors. Wish they had more options and wish it had a universal 1/4" female camera mount on the bottom like a lot of other cameras do. Note that you must be careful if you use any sort of clamp around outside of the base because the rotation of the top portion of the camera can be impacted if the sides of the camera are pressed in with any force.One last thing to note, this is a WiFi connected camera, which means it is range limited by your WiFi network, unlike most other YoLink devices which use LoRa technology for ranges up to 1/4 mile. As of this review, supposedly YoLink is working on a LoRa camera, and I'll be interested to see what they come up with because LoRa has somewhat limited bandwidth compared to WiFi.Overall, I'm satisfied with the camera as a first installment in a hopefully expanding YoLink IP camera lineup.Things I'd like to see in the future: a camera housing rated for outside use, a universal 1/4" female camera mount on bottom, more power options (such as PoE), better than 2 MP sensor, better night vision, higher microSD storage capacity limits (256 GB+), the ability to add the name of the camera to the video feed plus configure the embedded date/time, and possibly saving of the audio/video stream to the cloud.