HP unifies Poly and Vyopta assets into AI-powered workforce platform
HP Inc. debuted an AI-powered collaboration lineup at InfoComm 2026, integrating new headsets, conference room computers, video operating system updates, and a programmable keyboard under its Workforce Experience Platform. The new offerings, including the Poly Studio Room Compute built on Intel's third-gen Core Ultra processors, aim to simplify the management of meeting rooms and devices for IT teams. HP is consolidating its Poly Lens management tool and Vyopta analytics into a single console, featuring a premium add-on called Poly Lens Room VisualizerAI for interactive workspace replicas.
Key Takeaways
- HP Poly Studio Room Compute units use third-generation Intel Core Ultra processors with integrated NPUs for local AI processing.
- Poly Lens Room VisualizerAI, a premium add-on, creates interactive digital replicas of physical workspaces to help IT track room performance.
- The Poly focus 6 Series headsets feature Acoustic Fence 2.0 and spatial audio, delivering 25 hours of talk time with active noise cancellation.
- Poly VideoOS 5.1 introduces DirectorAI multi-camera technology to automatically switch views based on the active speaker in the room.
Why It Matters
The integration marks a strategic move to commoditize the hardware layer by shifting value to unified management software. By merging the 2024 Vyopta acquisition into the core platform, HP is targeting 'agentic' workflows where AI handles autonomous monitoring and remediation. For the streaming and collaboration ecosystem, this signals a shift from raw video connectivity toward data-driven workspace optimization. The entry of Intel's third-generation NPUs into meeting room compute suggests that localized AI features like real-time transcription and multi-camera switching will soon become the baseline requirement for enterprise-grade video platforms. Watch for Microsoft and Zoom to accelerate their own local AI certifications to match this hardware refresh.
Additional Context
HP’s consolidation strategy responds to a market where IT administrators are increasingly burdened by a 'sprawl' of separate tools for audio, video, and device telemetry. This shift reflects broader industry trends identified by Omdia in March 2025, noting that enterprise video equipment revenue rose as organizations pivoted toward Android-based videobars and integrated compute solutions to improve 'meeting equity.' While HP-Poly maintained approximately 29% of the enterprise headset market in 2024 per Omdia, it faces intense pressure from Cisco and Logitech in the room-systems category, where multi-vendor monitoring has become a critical differentiator. The hardware refresh specifically leverages Intel’s Core Ultra Series 3 platform, codenamed Panther Lake. Launched at CES 2026, these chips are the first built on the Intel 18A process, delivering up to 170 total TOPS of AI performance when combining CPU, GPU, and NPU resources, as reported by PCMag in January 2026. This compute overhead is essential for the 'invisible IT' vision HP executives outlined in March 2026, which envisions systems that can detect and resolve application conflicts or network strain before they disrupt a call. Furthermore, recent IDC findings from late 2025 suggest that two-thirds of enterprise customers now utilize hybrid deployment models involving multiple UC providers. HP’s decision to offer a single management console that incorporates multi-vendor telemetry from the Vyopta stack is a direct response to this fragmentation. By providing a unified view of Microsoft Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms alongside printing and compute fleets, HP aims to lock in large enterprise accounts through operational efficiency rather than peripheral hardware alone.
Read full article at siliconangle.com
