This architecture is used by many different brands such as Kramer, Airtame, and Mersive and relies on the corporate WiFi infrastructure and proprietary apps to enable notebooks and phones to connect to a shared display. Depending on the brand, the initial equipment price of these systems can be less than a button-based system but may also have higher installation and recurring costs that can impact the overall TCO.
For WiFi Network Hub systems, the overall performance of the system in a meeting is often dependent on the corporate network performance, especially for applications such as streaming video. Many network integration guides require specific bandwidth requirements, ping times, specific network ports, and QoS settings in order for the system to work properly. Because the receiver hubs are active network devices, IT managers need to safeguard against security threats to the corporate main network, as well as protect presentation content from unauthorized viewing over the network.
Due to the need to manage these active network WiFi Hub devices, many models have the recurring costs of separate support products and subscriptions to provide updates and security patches. For example, one major brand offers 20% of the initial cost of the device as an annual fee for each receiver display to provide security and feature updates. These costs, as well as the costs of deploying the updated apps should be considered in the TCO calculation.