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These lights bring your room to LIFE! Govee TV Backlight 3 Lite review

15.4K views· 154 likes· 7:29· Mar 5, 2024

In this review, I'll show you how easy it is to install these lights, their impressive syncing capabilities, and a few things to consider before buying. Plus, don't miss out on the Govee Oscar sale happening now! Check the links below for more info. Elevate your movie nights with Govee! 🎬✨ #Govee #TVBacklight #HomeTheater Check out the Govee Sale here to get all the products mentioned in this video: govee.sjv.io/dag5dM This description contains affiliate links for your convenience. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. ————————————— ABOUT THIS CHANNEL ————————————— This channel is all about Tech and Smart Home devices that I use every day to make my life more fun, efficient, and productive. I cover things like Tech devices, Home Automation, Apple Home, Home Assistant, Apple Tips, and Shortcuts tips. ——————————— WORLD WIDE WEB ——————————— 🌐 www.DelynTech.com 📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/delynstirewalt 🐦 Twitter: https://twitter.com/delynstirewalt

About This Video

I finally replaced the old “make-it-work” setup I had on the back of my TV (two Philips Hue light strips I was running as a pair) with a proper bias-lighting setup: the Govee TV Backlight 3 Lite with DreamView built in. In this video I walk through what’s in the box, how I installed the strip and control box without permanently sticking things to my TV, and the camera setup that balances on top of the TV (which I genuinely prefer over the older sticky-mount approach). I also show the app setup, calibration steps, and the settings I recommend tweaking—especially color calibration and white balance—so the colors look right. The big reason to buy this kit is Movie DreamView. With one toggle, the camera maps what’s on-screen and drives different sections of the strip to match, and in a dark room it’s extremely accurate. I also show how you can expand DreamView to other Govee devices (I used my Lyra floor lamps) to turn it into a whole-room experience—movie nights and game nights at my house will never be the same. I also cover the trade-offs: reflections and ambient light can throw off the camera (daytime + windows = yellow/green-ish hues), and Apple Home integration isn’t native. I explain the “finagling” I did using Home Assistant, a virtual switch, Alexa routines, and HomeKit Bridge to control DreamView from Apple Home, and I’m really hoping Matter support makes this easier.

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