Samsung WAFX-P interactive display brings AI-powered collaboration to offices and classrooms

Samsung has launched the WAFX-P, a premium interactive display built for conference rooms and classrooms that want to do more than just show a slide deck. The Samsung WAFX-P interactive display ships with a built-in 4K camera, integrated microphones, and dual 20-watt speakers, making it a self-contained communication hub rather than a passive screen waiting for a laptop to do the heavy lifting.

The pitch is straightforward enough: put one of these on the wall and you have a room that can host remote participants, annotate content in real time, summarize discussions automatically, and push content from up to nine devices at once, all without scrambling for cables or a separate conferencing kit.

What the AI tools actually do

The WAFX-P leans heavily on AI to handle the messier parts of a meeting. An AI Summary feature captures key points as discussions happen, which means someone in the room does not have to play secretary while also trying to contribute. Circle to Search lets users pull relevant information up during a session without breaking the flow of conversation to open a browser.

Live Caption functionality runs alongside all of this, generating real-time captions for anything spoken in the room. That has practical accessibility value, but it also helps in noisy environments or situations where participants are not fully fluent in the language being spoken.

All of this runs on Android 15 with an Octa-Core CPU underneath, which gives the display enough headroom to handle multitasking without things grinding to a halt when someone opens a third application mid-meeting.

 

 

Up to fifty people can draw on it at once

One of the more striking specs on the Samsung WAFX-P interactive display is its multitouch capability. The display supports dual-pen interaction and responsive multi-touch input from up to fifty users simultaneously. That number sounds almost absurd until you picture a large lecture hall or a workshop environment where multiple groups are annotating different sections of the screen at the same time.

The display runs at 450 nits of brightness, which Samsung says is enough to keep content legible across large rooms without washing out in well-lit spaces. Whether that holds up against bright overhead lighting in practice is something users will have to test for themselves, but the spec at least suggests Samsung thought about deployment in real commercial environments rather than just dim demo rooms.

Screen sharing from nine devices at once keeps remote participants in the loop rather than stuck watching a static view while the in-room conversation moves on without them.

Centralized management across multiple displays

For organizations thinking about deploying more than one unit, Samsung includes its on-premise Device Management Solution. Administrators can refresh on-screen content, push application updates, adjust settings, and send notifications across every connected WAFX-P display from a single point of control. That kind of centralized oversight matters a lot in education environments especially, where IT teams are managing dozens of rooms across a campus.

The management layer also helps with keeping sensitive information from lingering on screen between sessions, which becomes more relevant given that the display has a camera and microphones built in. Any room hardware with always-on audio and video components needs some thought around data exposure, and Samsung’s management tools at least give administrators a way to oversee what is happening across their fleet.

The price might raise eyebrows

Samsung has priced the 75-inch WAFX-P at $4,990. That is a number that will make a lot of smaller organizations pause, and realistically puts it out of reach for the kinds of underfunded classrooms that might benefit most from what it offers. Larger enterprises and well-resourced schools are the more likely buyers, which creates a somewhat uncomfortable gap between who the product is marketed toward and who can actually afford it.