
Google wants to make sure that embarrassing ‘blue-screen-of-breath’
in the shop window doesn’t have to be a thing anymore – it’s aiming
squarely are replacing windows as a dominant platform in the digital
signage industry, thanks to
new updates
that add to the Google browser’s single app kiosk mode. These include a
new Chrome sign builder, an app builder for fully-interactive kiosk
software, and new continuous reporting and rebooting tools for spotting
errors in signage deployments and fixing them on the spot.
Chrome’s new tools offer ways to build signs, schedule their
appearance, and deploy them across huge installations. You could swap
out a breakfast menu for a lunch one without breaking a sweat, for
instance, even in a multi-chain restaurant business. Likewise, the app
builder offers the same kind of thing for interactive self-service kiosk
installations, with the added benefit of taking away the need for a
“first-run” configuration process on each. The reporting tools provide
notifications if any single screen running the display goes down, and
offers remote rebooting capabilities. You can also remotely run
screen-caps to see what observers are seeing and make sure it lines up
with your intent.
Chrome and Chrome OS powering digital signs may not seem like a huge
deal in terms of most people’s daily usage, but it’s an angle on Chrome
OS outside of education and consumer-focused hardware that may not be
readily apparent, but that nonetheless could help push Chrome as a whole
forward, and have implications for the consumer track later on.