The new patent introduces methods to scale conversational groups from dozens to thousands of users, aiming to replace standard video-conferencing friction with what the company calls hyper-communication. By integrating these systems, organizations can theoretically bypass the communication degradation common in platforms like Microsoft Teams or Slack. Research cited by the company suggests that while standard meetings struggle with large headcounts, their approach maintains group intelligence, allowing hundreds of participants to converge on decisions with speed and accuracy.
This technology is already moving beyond the research phase. The U.S. Air Force recently contracted with the firm to integrate Hyperchat AI into their existing Microsoft Teams infrastructure, facilitating high-stakes collaboration among distributed personnel. To support broader commercial adoption, the company launched Thinkscape, a platform designed to manage real-time deliberation for groups of up to 250 people. A recent demonstration involving 250 participants successfully prioritized complex topics in under twenty minutes, showcasing a potential shift in how large enterprises handle brainstorming and forecasting.





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