When I facilitate online meetings I use miro as my white space. I often ask participants to split their computer screens to accommodate Zoom and Miro. Screen real estate is at a premium. Often people give Miro more screen real estate and lose the visual interaction with the video of Zoom participants.
Miro has had a tablet application for some time but it was difficult to interact with so people opted to split screens using a traditional keyboard and mouse to participate. That has changed.
The evolution of the Miro tablet application is a game-changer. It is now easier than ever to use the stylus to move objects around the board, convert handwriting to text, draw shapes and interact.
As we move into hybrid work, where people are in a physical location and others join via video platform a virtual whitespace is necessary. In person can view together on a big screen and online participants can use the traditional Zoom and a tablet. In person people interact with tablets or laptops as well. Tablets with a stylus are more natural to work with, in my opinion. Keyboard popups get in the way of response.
View the video below to see how Miro is accommodating natural data input and making it easier to accommodate the future of hybrid meetings.