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Delight ESL 4.2" Digital Buffet Tag , 4 Color ePaper Display - Eink
Harga biasa $ 100.00 SGDHarga biasaHarga jualan $ 100.00 SGD -
Delight 7.3 Inch Digital Tent Card – Full Color - Eink - App Control
Harga biasa $ 200.00 SGDHarga biasaHarga jualan $ 200.00 SGD -
Delight Electronic Shelf Label – 2.9" & 3.52" Digital Buffet Display Tag with Bluetooth E Ink
Harga biasa Daripada $ 40.00 SGDHarga biasaHarga jualan Daripada $ 40.00 SGD
Koleksi: Electronic Shelf Label
Electronic Shelf Labels (ESLs) and digital tent cards replace traditional paper cards across hospitality venues like buffet lines, bakeries, and fine-dining eateries. By utilizing ultra-low-power ePaper/E Ink technology or vibrant mini-LCD bars, these tags allow managers to update prices, allergens, and dietary symbols instantly via centralized software
1. Buffet Tags & Bakery Displays (Waterproof ePaper)
Food counters require highly legible tags that resist moisture, grease, and extreme temperatures inside chilled glass displays or hot buffet lines.
- Chilled Food Cases & Bakeries: Specialty food tags (ranging from 2.6 to 4.2 inches) feature an IP67 waterproof rating allowing them to be wiped down safely. They function flawlessly in cold environments down to 0°C / 32°F without sluggish screen refresh cycles or battery degradation.
- Multicolor Visual Indicators: Modern culinary ePaper tags use 4-color arrays (Black, White, Red, and Yellow). Chefs use the red and yellow channels as striking visual highlights to signal Vegan, Gluten-Free, Contains Nuts, or Spicy Level 3 icons directly alongside the menu item name.
- Secure Mounting: These tags slip into elegant food-grade stainless steel clips, acrylic countertop wedges, or ice-pins that push cleanly into pastry trays or ice beds.
2. Eatery Glass Food Displays (Stretched LCD Shelf Bars)
When a bakery or deli case requires bright animation, video loops of steaming food, or dynamic lighting to grab a customer's eye through glass, stretched LCDs are used.
- Ultra-Wide Stretched Bars: Instead of individual small boxes, a single panoramic Stretched LCD Shelf Edge Display runs along the inner edge of glass shelves. These displays typically come in aspect ratios like 16:3 or 16:1 or lengths of 23-inch to 48-inch bars.
- High Contrast Presentation: Operating at 400 to 700 nits, they shine brightly through curved glass and display vivid ingredient videos, scrolling pricing updates, or interactive QR codes that customers scan to see full nutritional facts.
3. Digital Tent Cards & Reserved Signage
Placing a bulky, corded tablet on a premium dining table ruins the ambience. Wireless ePaper tent cards provide a sleek, lightweight alternative.
- Dual-Sided Displays: Devices like the 7.5" Dual-Sided Electronic Tent Card feature ePaper screens mounted on both the front and back of a freestanding wedge casing. One side faces the customer to display table reservations or a premium cocktail menu, while the back faces staff or corridors to show table numbers or ordering statuses.
- Cordless Power: They run entirely on standard replaceable lithium batteries or internal rechargeable cells. Because ePaper only draws electricity for a brief microsecond when a room reservation or menu shifts, a single charge lasts up to 6 to 12 months on tables.
4. Digital Menu Cards & Table Tablets
For comprehensive menu interactions right at the dining table, high-utility hand-held digital cards bridge the gap between static print and mobile apps.
- ePaper Smart Menus: Utilizing larger 10.2" to 13.3" E Ink tablets, these digital menus mimic the texture and look of premium textured paper. They are completely glare-free under bright dining room chandeliers and consume virtually zero power during a long guest viewing session.
- Centralized Updates: If a kitchen runs out of a specific catch of the day or an expensive vintage wine at 8:00 PM, the manager changes the master spreadsheet. The item is automatically crossed out or removed from every digital card across the floor in real-time via local Bluetooth or Wi-Fi sub-networks.
Deployment & Centralized Control
The entire network of tags and digital tent cards connects to a centralized IoT Base Station (Access Point) hidden in the ceiling of the eatery. This transmitter utilizes a proprietary sub-GHz or low-energy protocol to communicate securely with up to thousands of display tags at once. Venues link this network directly to their cloud-based POS (Point of Sale) system, guaranteeing that whenever a price or item name is adjusted at the register, it updates instantly on the buffet line or bakery display case.