ZeroFrame Raises $28M to Bring Holographic Displays to Conference Rooms
Tech · 5 min read
ZeroFrame, a hardware startup developing compact, table-mounted holographic displays for collaborative work, announced a $28 million Series A led by Studio Ventures. The company demonstrated a prototype that projects life-sized, full-color 3D avatars and shared artifacts.
The device uses a micro-optics engine and real-time volumetric compression to stream holographic content at low bandwidth. ZeroFrame’s SDK supports desktop sharing, 3D model interaction, and cross-platform AR experiences so remote participants can jointly manipulate virtual objects in the local space.
ZeroFrame is targeting enterprise meeting rooms and design studios where spatial context matters. The company plans a developer program to enable CAD, BIM, and creative apps to publish holographic sessions that colleagues can join instantly from laptops and AR headsets.
Investors view holographic collaboration as a next-phase productivity category. ZeroFrame aims to ship developer kits next year after a closed pilot with architecture and automotive design firms.