At ISE 2026 in Barcelona, MAXHUB used a slate of new displays, conferencing tools, and management software to signal how hybrid work is reshaping expectations for meeting rooms, signage, and IT oversight.
MAXHUB arrived at ISE 2026 with a clear message: collaboration technology is no longer about isolated devices, but about how hardware, software, and platforms work together in everyday business settings. By anchoring its showcase around integrated displays and unified communications, MAXHUB framed its latest releases as responses to how meeting spaces, control rooms, and offices are actually being used, rather than how they were designed a decade ago.
Several of the products unveiled point to the growing demand for simplicity in increasingly complex environments. The Videobar XBar Series, which combines cameras and a Windows-based system in a single unit, reflects a push to reduce installation friction across rooms of different sizes. That same logic appears in the Universal Console and the company’s LED all-in-one display, both of which aim to collapse multiple functions into fewer touchpoints for users and IT teams alike.
Digital signage was another area where MAXHUB emphasized convergence. Its CMB Series smart display, designed to shift automatically between collaboration and signage modes, highlights how meeting rooms are expected to serve multiple purposes throughout the day. Rather than treating conferencing and signage as separate categories, the approach suggests that displays are becoming dynamic participants in workplace workflows, turning on or off based on context instead of fixed schedules.
The introduction of Pivot+, a web-based management platform, underscores how device oversight has become as important as the devices themselves. As organizations deploy more screens, cameras, and collaboration tools, centralized visibility and remote management are increasingly necessary to keep systems reliable and secure. In that sense, software is no longer an accessory to collaboration hardware but a prerequisite for operating it at scale.
MAXHUB’s collaboration with Microsoft through the Co-Create 100 initiative adds a broader industry dimension to the launch. By equipping selected global enterprises with fully built-out Teams Rooms, the program positions meeting spaces as strategic assets rather than basic infrastructure. Taken together, MAXHUB’s ISE presence suggests that the next phase of workplace collaboration will be defined less by headline features and more by how seamlessly technology fades into daily work.