DTEN ships D7X Teams‑room appliance with on‑device Copilot and full Teams integration

- DTEN on May 20 said its D7X AI conference-room device runs Microsoft Teams Rooms on Windows and adds on-device AI for framing, audio and participant attribution. - The device uses two depth sensors, a 48-megapixel camera, a 15-microphone array and a dedicated 8-core ARM processor alongside Intel Core Ultra 7. - DTEN lists the D7X AI in 55-inch form now, with a 75-inch version marked “coming soon.”

DTEN has begun marketing its D7X AI as a Microsoft Teams Rooms system that pushes more meeting intelligence onto the device itself rather than relying only on cloud processing. The company says the unit runs Microsoft Teams Rooms on Windows and is designed to improve how Copilot and Teams handle in-room participants, transcripts and camera framing. DTEN’s product page says the system uses on-device AI to identify people in a room, understand room boundaries and send individually framed participants into Teams Smart Gallery. Microsoft’s Teams documentation says enrolled users in supported Teams Rooms can be identified by voice or face, improving attribution in transcripts, recaps and Copilot experiences. ### What is DTEN actually shipping here? DTEN’s D7X AI is an all-in-one meeting-room display built for Microsoft Teams Rooms, with a 55-inch model available now and a 75-inch version listed as coming soon. The company says the device combines compute, camera, microphones, speakers and touch display in one system and runs Windows 11 rather than a proprietary appliance operating system. (dten.com) Microsoft’s device catalog lists a DTEN D7X series product for Teams with a 4K camera, 15-microphone array, stereo speakers and touchscreen display. Microsoft’s storefront also shows a listed price of $7,499 for a 75-inch D7X Teams configuration. ### How does the on-device AI part work inside the room? DTEN says the D7X AI uses two AI depth sensors with a combined 160-degree field of view and a 48-megapixel center camera to build what it describes as 3D understanding of the room before video reaches Teams. (dten.com) The company says its Vision Transformer depth sensing assigns distance to each pixel, allowing the system to distinguish people in the meeting area from reflections, photos or passersby outside glass walls. (microsoft.com) DTEN says a dedicated 8-core ARM processor handles AI workloads in parallel with an Intel Core Ultra 7 processor that runs Windows 11 and the meeting platform. In a company blog post, DTEN says that split architecture is intended to keep audiovisual processing separate from the collaboration software stack. ### Why does that matter for Teams and Copilot? Microsoft says Teams Rooms can use voice and face recognition to identify enrolled users, and that those identities flow into transcriptions, meeting recaps and Copilot experiences. (dten.com) The company also says face recognition support is available on Teams Rooms on Windows, while Teams Rooms on Android supports voice recognition but not face recognition. DTEN says generic room cameras often leave Copilot attributing action items to “someone in the room,” while the D7X AI is designed to capture who said what with speaker recognition and attributed transcripts. That claim lines up with Microsoft’s documentation that recognized participants can be named in transcripts and recaps instead of appearing only as generic speakers. (learn.microsoft.com) ### Is Smart Gallery a DTEN feature or a Microsoft feature? Microsoft says Teams Rooms uses AI features such as IntelliFrame and multi-stream intelligent cameras to give remote participants separate video frames for people in the room. DTEN says every real person in the room shows up individually in Teams Smart Gallery, though Microsoft’s own Teams Rooms pages more commonly describe the Teams feature set with the IntelliFrame branding. (dten.com) DTEN has separately said the D7X supports Microsoft IntelliFrame and Zoom Smart Gallery, reflecting that the hardware is being positioned across both ecosystems. The D7X AI page also says the device can run Zoom Rooms in addition to Microsoft Teams Rooms. ### What does this change for IT buyers? DTEN says the D7X AI is a native Windows endpoint that can be managed with Intune, Autopilot and Group Policy. (microsoft.com) Microsoft says Teams Rooms devices are part of a certified hardware ecosystem and can be planned, monitored and managed through Teams Rooms tools. The next concrete milestone is hardware availability: DTEN’s product page lists the D7X AI in 55-inch form today and says the 75-inch model is “coming soon,” while Microsoft’s storefront already shows the broader D7X Teams lineup and pricing. (dten.com 1) (dten.com 2)

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