HP has become the first company to preview Hardware with Google Beam, known as the first project star line, 3D video communication technology. This HP is launching a dimension, a device that features a 65 -inch light field display feature that includes six high -speed cameras inside Bezel to make a 3D video of your collar “a true life”.
Google again announced the brand of the project star line last month. At that time, Google said that it would use its design framework to make devices with beams, starting with HP, starting with HP. HP Dimension is for the use of enterprise. Its price, is 24,999, and does not include software needed to keep video calls, as users will need to buy Google Beam license separately to access zoom or Google Matts. (HP and Google have not said how much the license costs yet.)
Since my colleague Alex Heath pointed to the Google Beam demo, you do not need to see a partner, glasses, glasses, or any special equipment as if they are in the same room. Head of HP’s future consumer experiences, Beau Wilder said that you do not need a particular room, but the white background is the best of the “maximum” experience.
“We’re not trying to keep a carcincutic in a small box across the table,” said Wilder. “We want you to go to the room and contact the eyes without thinking about it immediately.”
HP Dimension users will still be able to call with other video conferencing platforms and devices, but their colleagues will not be able to see their photos presented in 3D – and vice versa. Along with a series of built -in cameras, HP Dimension also includes adaptive lighting that “adjusts the environment”, which allows users to see realistic shadows on facial features and natural skin colors.
The HP dimensions connect its Lightfield Display with a local audio, which Wilder said, “Never separates the sound from the body.” It comes with HP’s new poly studio A2 Table Mix, as well as its curved, “Sonicly Transparent” for the “Direct Way for Ears”, with four speakers located behind the mid wall.
During the briefing, Google Beam’s general manager, Andrew Nartkar, said, “The ultimate goal of Google Beam – and it appears on the dimensions of HP – it is to feel that you are there.” “You feel like you are on the working table together … This means that we have to gather and eventually feel that we are physically present.”
The HP dimension will begin later in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Japan. Companies like Sales Force, Devilite, and NEC Corporation have already pledged to bring Google Beam to their offices.


