Seen in a MCdonalds in germany.
Seen in a MCdonalds in germany.
Honestly, im more surprised by the fact that these kiosks run windows, than by the fact that it isnt activated
Seen in a MCdonalds in germany.
Honestly, im more surprised by the fact that these kiosks run windows, than by the fact that it isnt activated
It amazes me that people don't realize that most kiosks run windows.
As someone else pointed out, it just feels so unnecessary. So much overhead, security risk, and added expense. It’s difficult to believe there isn’t a company that specializes in kiosk systems running on some stripped down Linux distribution.
A question to consider seriously: name a company that has a full OS that supports modern tooling/development environments with consistent graphical fidelity across a wide range of hardware that a manufacturer can pay to maintain the host OS, provides guarantees to OS LTS/security patching and has a proven track record in deploying, supporting and delivering kiosk support.
The only serious answer is Microsoft, and maybe Canonical... But Canonical hasn't been around for as long as most of these kiosks have.
There are a couple of huge blockers for manufacturers looking at companies that provide Linux support:
The numbers these companies deal with isn't thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. It's tens or hundreds of millions. There is no way in hell a manufacturer is going to give an untested bespoke Linux distro maintainer 25 million to keep that Linux distro running for the next 10-20 years. There isn't a feasible way for a small company to even support at that price for that length of time.
Oracle and RedHat are the only truly feasible options, and it costs more to develop GUI apps on either platform when there isn't a 20 year track record of known success. It's obvious why companies pick Microsoft.
Why would MC Donald's need a windows PC. I would have imagined these were on some free software like Linux and their own custom wrapper or app on top. When you're deploying potentially millions, it would seem like quite a saving.
Why would it need to be activated? they usually run on a closed network, with no internet connection anyways
Legal reasons.
More than likely though the activation system just shat itself. If you've ever managed a large farm of windows machines with legitimate KMS activation you know shit breaks for no reason at all way too damn often.
Shit, that happened with my home pc, and they acted like they were doing me a favor by giving me some code to make the software I had already paid for work.
Wonder how much they pay per kiosk. I doubt they wrote this GUI as system-dependent to be bothered with Win. Probably just doesn't trust the word 'free'.
Don't quote me on that but I think I remember a McDonalds menu screen where the taskbar was visible and the menu was just a webapp opened in Google Chrome. I imagine the same goes for the ordering terminals.
I don't know about those in big franchises with payments processing, but small individual projects like interactive sceens in exhibitions usually do, as they don't need anything but a couple of pages, galleries, a simple update mechanism etc. Maybe this method was used there too.
Linux