Are employees really ready for the metaverse at work? Teams users could soon find out. Credit: Microsoft Microsoft’s metaverse for the workplace has officially arrived with the full launch of Mesh virtual meeting spaces on Wednesday. Instead of a Teams video call, workers can now don a virtual reality headset and interact with colleagues in a range of three-dimensional environments. Microsoft sees a variety of use cases for this: town halls, social gatherings, brainstorming sessions, and employee onboarding, are among the examples cited. A VR headset isn’t necessary: Mesh spaces can also be accessed via a regular PC, with users controlling a personalized avatar that can navigate the various settings. For those who want a fully immersive experience, support for Meta’s Quest headsets will arrive on Thursday. (Microsoft declined to comment about availability on Apple’s Vision Pro, which launches Feb. 2.) Immersive meetings can help remote workers stay connected to colleagues and their wider organization, according to Microsoft — and that can aid in employee retention. Meetings in Mesh give employees a “feeling of co-presence, even when they are physically separated,” a Microsoft spokesperson said, with features such as spatial audio adding to the sense of immersion. There are two ways to access Mesh spaces. One is via an option in the View menu in Microsoft Teams; there’s also a standalone app available in the Microsoft App Store and coming to the Meta Quest App Store tomorrow. Businesses can also customize 3D environments using a no-code editor, adding company logos for instance. For more control over Mesh spaces, there’s as a Unity-based “toolkit” for building 3D venues. By addressing some of the limitations of video meetings, Mesh can “play a role in creating cohesion for hybrid working arrangements,” said J.P. Gownder, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester. Whether Mesh will gain significant traction among business users remains unclear. Had the application launched in 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic spurred an uptick in remote work and investment in collaboration tools, Mesh might have had a better shot at widespread adoption, as seen with the boom in video conferencing tool usage. “The fact that people are more mobile now means that Mesh’s immersive spaces are unlikely to defray business travel, which has resumed in force,” said Gownder, who suggested a “much more gradual adoption rate than if the tool had debuted in 2020.” There’s also the key question of whether workers will be happy to meet and collaborate in virtual spaces using an avatar. The mood around metaverse-related technologies has shifted markedly in the three years since Mesh was introduced (initially as a mixed reality collaboration platform), despite the efforts of tech vendors such as Meta that have pushed the metaverse concept. Meta has its own workplace collaboration tool, Horizon Workrooms, which has been in beta for the past two years. “Like all ‘metaverse’ related technologies, a great number of people seem to find the concepts unappealing,” said Gownder. “That said, making it a feature of Teams means that those who find it useful can experiment and potentially create gravity to bring others into immersive spaces if they are truly useful. Time will tell.” Mesh is now generally available to customers on Teams Essentials, most Microsoft 365 plans, and Office365 enterprise tiers. Use of custom Mesh environments requires Teams Premium licenses. Related content feature 8 AI-powered apps that'll actually save you time Most AI apps are buzzword-chasing hype-mongers. These eight off-the-beaten-path supertools are rare exceptions. By JR Raphael Jul 01, 2024 15 mins Generative AI Productivity Software news analysis EU commissioner slams Apple Intelligence delay Margrethe Vestager, Europe's chief gatekeeper, takes a shot at Apple's decision to delay rolling out the company's AI. By Jonny Evans Jun 28, 2024 7 mins Regulation Apple Generative AI how-to Download our unified communications as a service (UCaaS) enterprise buyer’s guide Does your phone system date back to the last century? If so, you’re missing out on new technologies that can increase productivity and support a more distributed workforce. That’s where unified communications as a service, or UCaaS, comes By Andy Patrizio Jun 28, 2024 1 min Unified Communications Enterprise Buyer’s Guides Cloud Computing feature Enterprise buyer’s guide: Android smartphones for business Security is the biggest — but not only — factor when deciding what Android devices to support in your enterprise. See how Google, Honor, Huawei, Infinix, Itel, Motorola, Nokia, OnePlus, Oppo, Realme, Samsung, Tecno, Vivo, and Xiaomi stack By Galen Gruman Jun 28, 2024 23 mins Google Samsung Electronics Smartphones Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe