6 device roles, one synchronized floor.
Every device has a purpose. Main POS hosts, waiter takes orders, kitchen receives tickets, queue shows numbers, tableside lets customers add items, kiosk enables self-service — all synced over LAN.
Standard+ for LAN multi-device · No credit card required
What each device role does
Each role connects with role-aware payload shaping — devices receive only the data they need, with security allowlists enforced server-side.
Main POS
Central terminal that hosts the LAN server. Processes payments, manages cash shifts, and coordinates all connected devices. Runs cloud sync.
All plans
Waiter Tablet
Android tablets for tableside ordering. Staff take orders at the table — synced to kitchen and cashier instantly over LAN. No walking to the counter.
Standard+ (LAN multi-device)
Kitchen Display
Receives incoming orders in real time. Kitchen tickets print automatically when orders are confirmed. Role-aware payload — only sees what it needs.
Standard+ (LAN multi-device)
Queue Display
Large-format screen showing customer queue numbers. Slimmed payload for fast boot. Read-only — can't modify orders.
Standard+ (LAN multi-device)
Tableside Ordering
Customer-facing tablet at the table. Customers can add more items to an existing order. Add-on rounds re-trigger kitchen printing for new items only.
Standard+ (LAN multi-device)
Kiosk
Self-service ordering terminal. Occupancy-aware table picker for dine-in. Idle timeout auto-resets. Draft cleanup prevents ghost occupancy.
Standard+ (LAN multi-device)
How devices connect
1
Main POS starts LAN server
The Main POS hosts a WebSocket server on your local network. It shows available IP addresses for other devices to connect.
2
Devices connect with a role
Each device connects with a declared role. The server enforces role-based allowlists — kitchen can't modify orders, queue display is read-only.
3
Real-time sync over LAN
Waiter submits order → kitchen sees it instantly → cashier has the live bill. All over your local network, no internet needed.
Role-aware security
Payload shaping
Each role receives only the data it needs. Queue Display skips menu data to save bandwidth. POS user lists are role-scoped and strip PII.
Server-enforced allowlists
The Main POS enforces action allowlists based on server-known role metadata. Queue Display is strictly read-only. Unknown actions are rejected.
How industries use device roles
F&B (all 6 roles)
Main POS at counter. Waiter tablets on the floor. Kitchen display in the back. Queue display for pickup. Tableside for add-ons. Kiosk for self-service.
Retail (2–3 roles)
Main POS at primary checkout. Additional POS terminals for busy periods. Queue display optional for service counters.
Related features
Assign roles. Sync your floor.
Start your trial and connect your devices with purpose-built roles over LAN.
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