Skip to main content

Zoom for Home devices give you a second screen just for video calls

Zoom, the videoconference company that has become synonymous with our new pandemic-oriented way of conducting meetings from home, has announced its first hardware and software products, known as Zoom for Home.

Zoom for Home
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Created in collaboration with third-party device manufacturers, the first of these products is the $599 DTEN Me, a 27-inch touchscreen video panel that has three built-in wide-angle cameras and an eight-microphone array. It’s a fully self-contained videoconference device with its own Wi-Fi and Ethernet connections. Pre-orders for the DTEN Me are open now, and it is expected to ship in August 2020.

“After experiencing remote work ourselves for the past several months,” Zoom CEO Eric S. Yuan said in a press release, “it was clear that we needed to innovate a new category dedicated to remote workers.”

As the name suggests, Zoom for Home is intended to provide those who work from home with an affordable way to stay connected to their colleagues, without having to cram a Zoom meeting window into the limited screen real estate offered by the average laptop.

And though the DTEN Me might look like a 27-inch external computer monitor, with a limited resolution of 1080p, it’s clearly been designed as a video tool, not an extension of a user’s computer desktop, although with an HDMI input, it can certainly be used for this too.

The screen’s three cameras — which use a variety of angles —  give it a huge 160-degree field of view, which DTEN claims is good for a room of up to 16 x 16 feet — which ought to be more than enough coverage for the average home office or even a living room.

As a touchscreen device, you can also take advantage of the Zoom software’s built-in whiteboarding feature.

The device is compatible with any level of Zoom account — even the free basic tier — and can connect to any existing video system that uses Zoom’s Zoom Rooms software, the company’s $50 per month, per room enterprise videoconference product.

It’s tempting to compare the DTEN Me to other video chat-capable devices like the 10-inch $230 Nest Hub Max, 10-inch $180 Facebook Portal, or the 10-inch, $180 Amazon Echo Show. However, as affordable as these camera-equipped smart displays are, they’re strictly intended for person-to-person two-way video calling and don’t possess the necessary screen size to do multi-participant meetings, which has become Zoom’s killer feature as people have struggled to make working from home workable.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
Crazy! This 75-inch 4K TV is under $450 at Walmart right now
The onn. 75” Class 4K UHD (2160P) LED Frameless Roku Smart TV is a living room with orange walls.

Walmart continues its reign of great TV deals with the option to buy an Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV for just $448. A 75-inch TV for under $500 is pretty impressive and this TV usually costs $498 so you’re saving even more than usual. If you want a great new TV to add to your home for less, this is the perfect opportunity to do so while saving plenty of cash. Let’s take a look at what it has to offer.

Why you should buy the Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV
Onn. is nowhere to be seen in our look at the best TV brands but it’s still pretty respectable for anyone seeking a budget-priced TV. The most obvious benefit here is the hefty 75-inch 4K screen with 2160p resolution. It looks great with a crystal clear picture which is an excellent upgrade compared to an HD screen. The Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV might lack the finer features of the best TVs but it has the essentials arranged well.

Read more
Tubi teams with DAZN for sports as free TV service continues its takeover
The Tubi app icon on Apple TV.

Not that Tubi was exactly lacking for anything to watch, but the free (as in ad-supported) streaming service just added a couple more reasons to keep you glued to your couch. The Fox-owned FAST service (that's short for free ad-supported television) today announced a partnership with DAZN that brings a bevy of sports to platform.

The tentpole addition is DAZN Women's Football. It'll be available 24 hours a day, with "a compelling mix of live and classic soccer matches from prestigious tournaments." Those will include the UEFA Women's Champions League, Liga F, and the Saudi Women's Premier League, among others. It'll be available in the U.S. and Canada.

Read more
Hisense’s PX3-Pro Laser Cinema gets AI, a bigger picture, and better sound
The Hisense PX3-Pro Laser Cinema.

Hisense's PX2-Pro Laser Cinema ultra short throw projector made all kinds of best projector lists for its excellent picture, big brightness, and accurate color. Today, the Chinese electronics maker announced the popular projector's latest model, the PX3-Pro, a $3,500, premium triple-laser projector that improves on its predecessors with better sound, a brighter light source, and AI smarts to further enhance its image.

The PX3-Pro sees some improvements over the PX2. For one, it's brighter than the PX2's 2,400 ANSI lumens at 3,000 ANSI lumens, which should mean a significant boost, especially in brighter rooms. But one key improvement with the PX3 that Hisense is certainly hoping will make an impact is its integration of "real-time Pro AI Algorithms" that Hisense says will "enhance brightness, fine-tune contrast, and eliminate noise." Using AI to enhance picture quality, color, and more, has been showing up in all the best TVs over the last year or so, so it's no surprise to see it start making its way into the best projectors now, too.

Read more