Zoom stories
It aims to cut clutter and installation headaches as firms rework meeting rooms for hybrid work and routine video calls.
Customer service teams can now build and monitor AI agents more easily, with Zoom adding testing, quality controls and outcome-based pricing.
The unified setup gives IT teams one view of meeting rooms, devices and analytics as businesses seek simpler management for hybrid work.
Pressure is mounting on AI groups to prove users will keep paying, after Plaud said recurring revenue hit USD $100 million in two years.
Meeting-room decisions will now flow into follow-up work more easily as Zoom rolls out AI capture, signage and camera tools for offices.
Clearer audio and simpler rollouts are set to help schools and businesses equip Zoom Rooms for hybrid meetings and AI tools.
Meeting rooms with poor acoustics are set to hear clearer speech, as the new array adds AI echo, noise and reverb suppression.
Revenue teams can now pull call transcripts, coaching notes and pipeline data into AI tools, reducing manual prep for forecasts and account reviews.
The new suite aims to cut post-meeting admin for consultants and small teams by converting calls and chats into files in minutes.
The new service links meetings with enterprise systems, letting users trigger workflows and draft documents without switching apps.
Customer support teams could gain more control as the new toolkit cuts developer queues and ties training into community hubs.
Long hours at a desk are the target as a cushioned keyboard and silent mouse aim to ease strain and noise for hybrid workers.
The update aims to cut lost action items by linking meetings, in-person chats and workplace systems across Zoom, Teams, Google Meet and more.
Workers can now pull Zoom meeting notes and transcripts into ChatGPT, Claude and Codex, reducing the need to hunt across systems.
A$100 price rise may sting, but the M5 model still offers all-day battery life, strong performance and more storage for buyers.
10ZiG and Parallels broaden partnership to offer secure virtual applications and desktops for hybrid work, cutting endpoint costs and complexity.
The hire comes as companies face mounting pressure to validate AI features and core software before release, boosting demand for Testlio's services.
The Surrey law firm cut desktop management overheads by moving 240 staff to cloud-based virtual desktops and centrally managed thin clients.
Most large companies have shifted AI into live use, but senior leaders remain split on whether it will drive hiring or cuts.
Rising AI-driven phishing is forcing cyber security vendors to bolster defences, as Abnormal AI adds senior leaders in product, customer success and legal.