
For example, it lets you add your contacts data with a single gesture. WarRoom’s attention to detail is where focusing on just a few features pays off. Of course, if you already had avatars and profiles set up with Microsoft, they appear as you’d expect. No fooling around with creating avatars or setting up profiles. Accepting the invite takes you right into download and install, then bam - you’re there in the room. I’ve tried to set up conference calls that took longer. (Somebody’s going to have to guide me to the potty soon - no facilities in virtual reality.)

Here’s what they think you need - and I’ll say now, it is so much of what I need that I don’t want to take my VR headset off, ever. It’s an experiment to see if they were right about what people working together need - and don’t need - in a virtual team room.
WARROOM COM APP CODE
On one hand, it’s not a half-baked hodgepodge of bad code (and worse usability) on the other, it’s not one isolated feature polished to within an inch of its life. Their VR environment avoids the rock-and-hard-place of minimal viability. The WarRoom team shows that they truly understand the concept. People love to throw around the term, “minimally viable product,” (MVP for short). Several of them had never used VR gear before. Took me about five minutes to get 15 people in a virtual room. Setup from there is a lot like creating a Slack channel and inviting members. You download their VR app to the platform of your choice and connect to WarRoom, which is a Skype-like combination of servers and P2P. Gotta keep this stuff straight these days.) WarRoom is a team room, plain and simple.

(Yeah, these guys are full-on VR, not augmented reality - that’s HoloLens. The concept behind WarRoom isn’t anything you wouldn’t expect from a virtual reality product. Same room? Really? You built your product with everyone in the same physical room? Are you old or stupid? Building it with people who aren’t all in the same room every day is…and here’s where you’d expect me to say, “even harder.” But Microsoft’s WarRoom team would say: Building a new product or company is hard.
