LG Electronics has thrown its hat into the hybrid meeting room ring with the One:Quick Works, a 55-inch 4K touchscreen display that integrates a Windows 10 IoT Enterprise PC, camera, microphones, and speakers into a single device. It’s arriving through LG’s business display sales channels, targeting companies that want to simplify their conference room technology stack without cobbling together separate components.
What’s in the One:Quick Works Box?
LG’s new all-in-one isn’t just a big screen. The 55-inch panel supports 4K resolution and multi-touch interaction, functioning as a digital whiteboard and content-sharing canvas. But unlike a standard interactive display that requires an external computer, the One:Quick Works has a built-in PC running Windows 10 IoT Enterprise, a locked-down operating system designed for dedicated devices like kiosks and point-of-sale terminals.
An integrated camera sits at the top bezel—no word yet on resolution or whether it includes a physical privacy shutter—and a microphone array plus speakers handle audio capture and playback. That means a single box handles video, audio, and compute, with presumably a single power cord and maybe an HDMI output for a secondary display. Specific ports and connectivity options haven’t been detailed in the initial announcement, but typical collaboration displays include USB, HDMI, and Ethernet, and this model likely follows suit. Expect USB-C connectivity for one-cable laptop hookups, following industry trends.
Crucially, because it runs a standard Windows OS, IT teams can install the collaboration apps their organization already uses: Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Google Meet, Cisco Webex, or any others. It’s not locked to a single ecosystem like some Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms appliances. Instead, the One:Quick Works can serve as a flexible platform, potentially running multiple conferencing clients and even line-of-business applications. The touch capability likely supports 20-point or more, based on LG’s other interactive panels, and could include InGlass technology for smooth writing. The built-in microphone array’s beamforming and speaker output will determine how well it handles different room sizes—something to test during a demo.
What This Means for Your Meeting Rooms
For any team managing hybrid meeting spaces, the appeal is straightforward: one device to purchase, mount, and maintain instead of a TV, a computer, a camera, and a speakerphone. IT departments get a single SKU to standardize on, a single vendor to call for support, and less cabling to wrangle. Because the internal PC runs Windows 10 IoT Enterprise (likely the 2021 Long-Term Servicing Channel), it will receive security updates through 2031, offering a long lifecycle without feature updates chiming in to break conference room setups.
The touchscreen and built-in whiteboarding capability mean you can walk into a room, start a meeting, and brainstorm without hooking up a device. Participants joining remotely see the whiteboard content through the running app’s screen sharing. And when not in a meeting, the display can serve as a digital signage panel for company announcements—another common use case for Windows IoT devices.
But there are trade-offs. All-in-one devices lock you into a single hardware configuration. If the camera or PC becomes obsolete before the display does, you’re replacing the whole unit. Conversely, modular setups let you upgrade components independently. And while the Windows 10 IoT PC can run standard desktop apps, its hardware might be fixed and not user-upgradeable; LG hasn’t disclosed the exact processor, RAM, or storage. For most meeting room needs it should suffice, but if you plan to run demanding design software on the same screen, you’ll need to verify performance.
Cost is another unknown factor. LG hasn’t announced pricing, but comparable 55-inch interactive displays with integrated PCs range from $4,000 to $7,000. This is a capital expense, but it might replace three or four separate devices, simplifying procurement. For a small business with one meeting room, a simpler solution like a large TV and a dedicated meeting room PC might be cheaper upfront, but the integrated approach reduces support burdens over time.
Security-minded admins will appreciate that Windows 10 IoT Enterprise supports Unified Write Filter, which prevents unauthorized changes to the system. That’s ideal for meeting room appliances that should stay in a known-good state. As a generic Windows endpoint, it can be enrolled in Microsoft Intune or another MDM, giving you basic policy control. However, native integration with room management platforms like Microsoft’s Teams Rooms Pro Management might require additional configuration or certification that hasn’t been confirmed yet.
How We Got Here
Pandemic-driven hybrid work accelerated a convergence of AV and IT in corporate meeting spaces. Pre-2020, many conference rooms had a projector or TV, a separate PC or laptop dock, and a dedicated conferencing camera and speakerphone. When remote participation became equal in importance, companies scrambled for larger touch-enabled displays with better audio and video, plus integrated compute to avoid driver conflicts and lengthy boot times.
Vendors responded. Microsoft partnered with hardware makers like Yealink, Poly, and Crestron to produce Teams Rooms systems—often a touch console, a compute module, and one or two displays. Google launched its Series One kits for Google Meet. Zoom worked with Neat and others. Meanwhile, display-first companies like Samsung, BenQ, and now LG saw an opportunity to embed Windows directly into their professional interactive panels. Samsung’s Flip series offers models with embedded Windows or Android; BenQ’s Board line also includes Windows configurations.
LG has been a major player in commercial displays for years: digital signage, hotel TVs, and large-format monitors. The One:Quick Works is the company’s play to capture the meeting room market with a single, well-integrated product. It’s part of LG’s “One:Quick” series, which already included other collaboration-focused devices. Running Windows 10 IoT Enterprise—not Windows 10 Team, the specialized version found on Microsoft’s Surface Hub—gives LG a familiar platform that IT shops already know how to manage.
The choice of Windows 10 IoT Enterprise over Windows 11 IoT might raise eyebrows, but it’s common for embedded devices. The 2021 LTSC release of Windows 10 IoT Enterprise is supported until 2031 and receives security patches. It avoids the feature updates that can disrupt stable, appliance-like machines. Microsoft has indicated a forthcoming Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC, but it isn’t available yet. So LG chose the proven, quiet option.
What You Should Do Now
If you’re evaluating meeting room technology, put the One:Quick Works on your short list alongside competitors like Samsung’s Flip Pro with Windows, BenQ’s Board, or a standard interactive display paired with a Mini PC. Your decision should hinge on:
- Ecosystem fit: Does your organization rely heavily on a single platform? If everyone uses Microsoft Teams, a certified Teams Rooms system might give a more native experience (one-touch join, proximity detection, etc.). The One:Quick Works can run Teams, but it won’t offer that same appliance-level integration unless LG specifically certifies it for Teams Rooms—which hasn’t been announced.
- Management: How do you manage your fleet? If you already use Intune or another MDM for Windows devices, adding this display to the mix could be easier. If you prefer a purpose-built admin console for meeting rooms, check whether the One:Quick Works can be enrolled there.
- Scale: For a handful of rooms, flexibility might trump standardization. For a global deployment across hundreds of rooms, you’ll want to talk to LG about bulk purchasing, support, and warranties. The display is sold through LG’s business sales channels, meaning you’ll go through a sales representative rather than picking one up at retail.
- Demo it: Since the One:Quick Works is new, availability might be limited initially. Reach out to an LG account manager to arrange a pilot in one of your conference rooms. Pay attention to boot time, camera quality in various lighting, and how well the touch works with your preferred whiteboarding app.
Installation will require a wall mount or rolling stand, likely available as accessories from LG. The unit’s weight and VESA pattern will determine compatibility with existing mounts. IT will need to configure Windows IoT out of the box—join it to the domain or Azure AD, install necessary apps, and set up MDM policies. This is a one-time effort per room but can be streamlined with imaging tools.
There’s no immediate action deadline—this isn’t a patch or a recall—but if you’re planning a meeting room refresh in 2025, getting hands-on with a unit early could inform your purchasing decision.
What to Watch Next
The all-in-one collaboration display market is heating up. Expect more competitors to launch Windows-powered models, and watch for Microsoft’s response. The Surface Hub 3 shipped last year with a modular compute cartridge that runs a Teams Rooms-like experience, but it’s expensive and not as open as a standard Windows device. If customers flock to more flexible, lower-cost options like LG’s, Microsoft might adjust its strategy.
For the One:Quick Works specifically, look for detailed specifications—processor, RAM, storage, and camera specs—plus pricing and general availability. Early adopter case studies from businesses will reveal how well the device holds up in daily use. And keep an eye on Windows 11 IoT Enterprise: as that platform matures, future revisions of the One:Quick Works could offer newer features and even longer support.