HP exposes very first Google Beam 3D video conferencing setup, priced at $25,000

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Amid all the Gemini hype at Google I/O last month, the company also turned one of its experiments into a (kind of) real product
Project Starline was reborn as Google Beam, a 3D video conferencing system that makes it look like you're in the same room with the other
party
Google said HP would reveal the first Beam setup, and now it has
The HP Dimension is coming this year, and the price tag is a predictably hefty $24,999.Google Beam calls for a lot of advanced hardware, so
the high price isn't a surprise
The HP Dimension uses six high-speed cameras positioned around the display to capture the speaker from multiple angles
This visual data is then fed into Google's proprietary volumetric video model, which merges the streams together into a 3D reconstruction of
the speaker.Eventually, there will be Beam systems of various sizes, but the HP model comes with a big 65-inch display
All Beam systems will use light field screen technology, which can show the volumetric model in 3D, eliminating the need to wear a headset
or glasses for the 3D effect
Google says Beam can show minute details at 60 fps with millimeter-scale precision.Obscene price tag aside, Google Beam is impressive
technology
We got a glimpse of it at Google I/O, and it really does look like the person you're talking to is on the other side of the table
Google and HP claim that Beam's 3D video makes meetings more efficient, with better display of non-verbal cues and participants experiencing
improved recall of details versus a regular 2D chat
Google also promises its Meet-based live translation features will come to Beam later.