Skip to main content

Unitronic serves up smart hospitality solutions

Restaurants, bars and cafes will be able to speed order times and improve customer service with the help of two new products from Singapore-based Unitronic. The company unveiled its eMenu and eWaiter products, which bring digital innovation to the front and back of house. The e-Waiter solution is a tablet-based table-top or wall-mounted system enabling customers to select their food and drink orders and send them to the kitchen or bar for preparation. They can track the status of their order, add requests o
November 4, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Donald Gan, Unitronic

Restaurants, bars and cafes will be able to speed order times and improve customer service with the help of two new products from Singapore-based Unitronic. The company unveiled its eMenu and eWaiter products, which bring digital innovation to the front and back of house. The e-Waiter solution is a tablet-based table-top or wall-mounted system enabling customers to select their food and drink orders and send them to the kitchen or bar for preparation. They can track the status of their order, add requests or summon waiting staff over to the table. Restaurants can also modify the system to include specials, promotional items and to cross-sell. The eWaiter is a mobile phone-based solution which is particularly well-suited to al fresco settings. It enables service staff members to take an order on a mobile handset and send it wirelessly to the bar for preparation. It then issues a prompt when the order is ready to take to the table. On returning with the order, servers are able to take payment wirelessly as well. Unitronic has also launched a ‘closed loop’ debit card and loyalty card solution. The NRL- and RFID-ready system enables merchants to offer customers e-wallets, storing value securely. They can be loaded with extra credits and used as gift cards or as part of loyalty schemes.

Related Content

  • Debating contactless toll charging by smartphone
    April 25, 2012
    Developments in the mass transit sector could provide indicators of potential for greater use of mobile consumer electronic devices for charging and tolling, according to Consult Hyperion’s Mike Burden. However, opinion among toll system suppliers is divided. Jason Barnes reports The combination of mass-market devices and their protocols, typified by smartphones featuring near field communication (NFC), points to some exciting cross-fertilisation possibilities in the charging and tolling sector, says Consul
  • A fresh approach to electronic fee collection
    July 16, 2012
    The Utah Transit Authority (UTA) is pioneering fresh approaches to Electronic Fee Collection (EFC) deployment in the US. Its new system, operational since January 2009 on all buses and commuter trains, is the country's first full-network rollout of transit e-ticketing technology built on an open-payment network, according to the organisation's Technology Programme Development Manager Craig Roberts.
  • Smartphone - the next technology for charging and tolling?
    January 25, 2012
    With all the debates over the most suitable future technology or technologies for charging and tolling, is it not time for the industry to look at what the rest of ITS is doing and bring a rank outsider - the smart phone - closer into the fold? By Jack Opiola, D'Artagnan Consulting LLC
  • Alliance stages North American back office interoperability trial
    December 4, 2013
    JJ Eden, President and CEO of the Alliance for Toll Interoperability, talks to Jason Barnes about the new inter-agency hub, which will facilitate national transactions When it comes to achieving interoperability, the sheer diversity of technologies in operation in the US is perhaps the tolling industry’s greatest defining characteristic and its biggest challenge. The situation is in stark contrast with some other regions of the world, such as Europe where the use of common front-end Dedicated Short-Range