Sponsored Brief

A New Way to Use Computers Is Opening to Private Investors

Immersed wants to turn one laptop into a workspace with several digital screens, using a wearable display instead of a wall of monitors. The company is currently raising money through a private investment offering. Here is the simple story, why it may matter, and what to know before reviewing the official materials.

Big Computer Shift Private Offering Official Materials

Review the company materials and offering details directly.

The idea Your screens could travel with your laptop
Why it matters Computer work may move beyond the monitor
The offering A private investment to review carefully

Laptops made work portable. They also made it cramped.

Most people now work across too many tabs, calls, charts, messages, documents, and dashboards. A laptop can go anywhere, but the small screen can make real work feel crowded fast.

Extra monitors help at home or in an office. They do not help much in a hotel room, a small apartment, a shared workspace, or on the road. Immersed is focused on a simple idea: keep the laptop, but make the screen space feel much bigger.

A comparison of a crowded desk and a cleaner virtual-screen workspace
A better workspace story is not louder. It is cleaner, more portable, and easier to reset.

A computer setup that does not need five monitors

Virtual screens are digital monitors you can see through a compatible wearable display. Instead of buying and carrying several physical screens, a user could open multiple screens around one laptop.

Immersed develops software for this kind of workspace and is working on Visor, a wearable display designed for productivity. The company says the goal is to help people work with more screen space without building a large desk setup.

What the idea looks like

This product clip, served from the official Immersed media CDN, shows the basic idea: multiple digital screens appearing around a laptop workflow.

  • Official product media from Immersed
  • Several screens without several desk monitors
  • A technology story with an offering to review

Three pieces of a bigger digital workspace

01

Virtual screens

Digital monitors that can appear around a laptop when used with compatible wearable hardware.

02

Wearable display

A display device concept for people who want more screen space without a large physical setup.

03

Work tools

Software features meant to help people organize screens, stay focused, and work with others.

If computer habits change, the tools around them can matter.

Many big technology shifts start with one everyday problem. For Immersed, that problem is screen space. The question is not whether everyone will wear a device all day. The question is whether enough people want a bigger workspace that can travel with them.

The investment offering, in plain English

Immersed is currently offering private shares. The facts below come from official SEC materials and the company's offering page. Terms can change, so readers should confirm the latest information before making any decision.

Key Facts SEC supplement
Company
Immersed Inc.
Plain-English version
Private shares in Immersed Inc.
Official legal type
Regulation A, Tier 2 offering of Series B Common Stock
Current share price
$0.79
Minimum investment
$999.35 plus a 3.0% investor transaction fee

Source: SEC Offering Circular Supplement No. 2 dated May 15, 2026. Review SEC supplement.

Professional using a wearable display with multiple virtual screens around a laptop
The official offering materials explain the company, share terms, and investor requirements.

Fast answers in plain English

What is Immersed?

Immersed Inc. is a private company building tools that could let people work with multiple digital screens from a laptop and wearable display.

What are virtual screens?

Virtual screens are digital monitors you see through compatible wearable hardware. They can create a multi-screen workspace without several physical monitors.

Where can readers review the official offering documents?

Readers can review the SEC offering supplement and the company's official offering page.

Want to look closer?

Start with the official offering page and SEC materials to see the latest company details and terms.