HP Dimension with Google Beam: Transforming Remote Collaboration
Remote work is not just about connecting. It is about creating a meaningful sense of presence. As hybrid work becomes the norm, organizations need collaboration experiences that approach the impact of being in the same room. HP Dimension with Google Beam rises to this challenge by redefining what remote collaboration can feel like when technology, space, and integration work together.
By combining HP’s enterprise‑grade collaboration hardware with Google Beam, an AI‑first 3D video communication platform formerly known as Project Starline, HP Dimension goes beyond traditional video conferencing. The result is a life-sized, true‑to‑life meeting experience that restores eye contact, body language, and natural presence without the need for headsets or wearables.
To understand the impact of HP Dimension with Google Beam, let’s break down what it is, how it works, and why it is redefining enterprise collaboration when deployed with intention.
What Is HP Dimension with Google Beam?
HP Dimension with Google Beam is a first‑of‑its‑kind, AI‑powered 3D video communication system designed for enterprise meeting spaces. It blends advanced hardware, AI imaging, and spatial audio to create deeply immersive, face‑to‑face meeting experiences, even when participants are miles apart.
At the center of the solution is Google Beam, Google’s breakthrough 3D video communication technology built on years of research from Project Starline. Google Beam uses a light‑field display, multiple cameras, and AI‑driven volumetric video models to render people in realistic 3D, allowing natural eye contact, gestures, and non‑verbal cues to come through clearly.
HP Dimension is the first enterprise‑grade device built specifically for Google Beam, formally introduced at InfoComm 2025 and designed for real workplaces rather than experimental environments.
How HP Dimension with Google Beam Works
HP Dimension achieves its realism by combining several advanced technologies into a single, purpose‑built system:
65‑inch light‑field display that presents life‑sized depth and realism
Six high‑speed cameras embedded discreetly in the bezel to capture multiple angles
AI‑powered volumetric video processing that reconstructs participants in 3D
Adaptive lighting that aligns with room conditions and skin tones
Spatial audio that places voices exactly where the person appears on screen
Together, these elements create conversations that feel far less like video calls and far more like sitting across the table from someone. A detailed technical overview of the system architecture is outlined in HP’s official documentation, here.
Unlike VR or AR solutions, HP Dimension requires no headsets, glasses, or wearables, making it practical for executive meetings, customer interactions, and other high‑stakes collaboration scenarios. Just as importantly, it is designed to be integrated into enterprise environments without disrupting existing workflows.
Why Traditional Video Meetings Fall Short
Standard video conferencing tools are effective, but they have clear limitations. Flat screens often struggle to convey:
Eye contact
Subtle facial expressions
Natural turn‑taking
Body language and gestures
Testing from HP and Google shows that immersive 3D meetings using HP Dimension with Google Beam deliver measurable improvements over traditional video calls, including a 28 percent increase in memory recall, up to 39 percent more non‑verbal communication, and a 14 percent increase in focus. Industry analysts have noted that these gains could significantly change how organizations approach high‑value meetings, as explored in Forbes’ analysis of HP Dimension with Google Beam.
At AVI‑SPL, we see these challenges play out every day in enterprise environments. Traditional video meetings often limit engagement, especially in high‑stakes conversations. Through real‑world deployments, we have seen how HP Dimension with Google Beam helps restore a sense of presence by making interactions feel more natural, improving focus, and enabling participants to connect as if they are in the same room.
To explore how this technology changes the hybrid meeting experience in practice, we break it down in our resource.
Designed for High‑Value Enterprise Use Cases
HP Dimension with Google Beam is not intended to replace every meeting. It is designed to elevate the conversations that matter most.
Ideal use cases include:
Executive leadership and board meetings
High‑value customer and partner engagements
Strategic planning sessions
Hiring and talent interviews
Financial services, healthcare, and consulting conversations
The system integrates natively with Google Meet and Zoom Rooms, and supports cross‑platform compatibility with Microsoft Teams and Webex. As noted by integration partners and industry specialists, this flexibility allows HP Dimension to coexist within existing collaboration ecosystems rather than forcing platform change. An additional perspective on enterprise use cases can be found in coverage from CE Pro and RoomReady.
Built for IT Confidence and Scalable Deployment
From an IT and AV perspective, HP Dimension is engineered for enterprise readiness:
Minimal room remediation requirements
Purpose‑built for small meeting and executive spaces
Secure, cloud‑powered AI processing via Google Beam
HP‑backed hardware reliability and long‑term support
Rather than functioning as a standalone device, HP Dimension is designed to be part of a broader collaboration ecosystem. Successful deployments depend on room design, acoustics, network readiness, and ongoing optimization, all of which influence how immersive the experience feels in practice.
Final Takeaway
HP Dimension with Google Beam represents a meaningful step forward in enterprise collaboration, moving beyond traditional video meetings to deliver more natural, engaging, and human connections. By combining life‑sized 3D video, spatial audio, and AI‑powered imaging, the solution helps organizations close the gap between in‑person and remote interactions, especially in high‑value, high‑impact conversations.
As an integration‑led technology, realizing its full potential depends on thoughtful room design, seamless platform alignment, and ongoing support within real enterprise environments.