Order stays in order
Tickets queue oldest-first and never fall off the rail or stick together. The cook always knows what's next.
KDS (Kitchen Display System / kitchen screen)
The order arrives on the kitchen screen, the cook makes it, taps "ready" — and the floor is told without anyone shouting.
No more "who took this ticket, how long has it been waiting". The screen keeps the order, the order, and the clock.
Kitchen display screen mockup with colour-coded order tickets
Order in, clock starts. Late ones turn red.
The cook reads timing by colour — no one has to check a stopwatch.
Saturday, the printer never stops
Slips spill off the rail, some slide to the floor, two stick together. The grill cook can't tell which lahmacun went in first. A table's been waiting twenty minutes; nobody noticed because the slip got buried. The food isn't the problem and the cook isn't slow — the paper is.
How it looks
Green just arrived, amber is working, red has waited too long. Tap a dish when it's plated; tap the ticket when the whole order is done. The waiter gets the ping automatically.
Three steps
However it was placed — kiosk, till, waiter tablet — it appears on the kitchen screen the same second, in the right order.
Colour shows the clock; notes show the detail — no onion, extra spicy. Multiple stations? Each sees only its own items.
One tap clears the ticket and pings the floor. The waiter or the runner picks up without a single shout across the pass.
What it does
Tickets queue oldest-first and never fall off the rail or stick together. The cook always knows what's next.
Each ticket warms from green to red as it waits. One glance tells the chef what's falling behind.
Tap done and the waiter's tablet pings. No bell, no shouting "order up" across a loud kitchen.
Grill, cold line, bar — split the screen by station so each cook sees only what they make.
Quietly logs how long each dish takes. Over weeks that becomes data you can act on — and feeds the kitchen assistant we're building.
30 seconds, no sound
Real footage from a working kitchen, not animation. Filmed at our reference restaurant in Kotor.
~30 sec
Better together
Whether the order came from the kiosk, the till or the waiter's tablet, it lands on the same screen. When it's ready, the waiter is pinged and the courier knows it's time to roll. One kitchen, every channel.
One tap at the till, straight to the kitchen — on a tablet, no bulky hardware.
Explore moduleCut the queue — let customers place orders themselves.
Explore moduleTake orders, close checks — one tablet at the table.
Explore moduleTie delivery orders to a route, control the handoff.
Explore moduleAutomatic depletion, ingredient breakdown, alert thresholds.
Explore moduleWhere to find it
Not in Sadece Online Menü or Deniz. From Ada it runs on a tablet or your own TV; Ata ships two dedicated screens.
The five we hear most
Let's talk
In a 15-minute call we pick the right package together. Ask for a demo, get pricing, ask questions — no contract.