Chromebox-for-meetings is available in the US and is to be released later this year in Australia, Britain, Canada, France, Japan, New Zealand, and Spain.
Source:
AAP
7 Feb 2014 - 10:08 AM  UPDATED 7 Feb 2014 - 10:12 AM

Google has taken aim at office meeting rooms with the release of a Chromebox for videoconferencing.

"These days, we often connect with each other from far-flung locations, co-ordinating time zones and dialling into conference calls from our phones," product management vice president Caesar Sengupta said in a blog post.

"Meetings need to catch up with the way we work - they need to be face-to-face, easier to join, and available from anywhere and any device."

Chromebox-for-meetings is available in the US at a starting price of $US999 ($A1,118) and is to be released later this year in Australia, Britain, Canada, France, Japan, New Zealand, and Spain.

The first model box comes with a high-definition camera and a speaker with a microphone.

A monitor must be provided.

There is an annual management fee of $US250 for the videoconferencing set-up.

As many as 15 people can take part in a Chromebox video conference using smartphones, tablets, laptops or other internet linked computers.

Google has been working to expand its business beyond online search and into businesses with a productivity and collaboration software offered as services in the internet cloud.

The California technology titan also continues to promote Chrome-powered boxes and laptops that push computing power to servers in Google data centres.

Google introduced the first Chromebook in mid-2010 in a challenge to Windows operating software at the heart of Microsoft's empire.

The array of Chromebook makers has grown to include Acer, Asus, Lenovo, Samsung and Hewlett-Packard, with many models offered at bargain prices when compared to high-end laptops.

Shifting operating software to banks of servers online means that Google updates programs and fends off hackers and malicious software.