Retail & Public Spaces

An always-on info desk on a screen.

Drop an avatar onto a kiosk in a mall, airport, hotel lobby, or transit hub. Multilingual help in 50+ languages, around the clock, with offline fallback when the upstream network falters.

What's broken today

01

Staffed information desks are expensive and rarely cover the hours visitors actually need help.

02

Multilingual coverage means hiring or training staff for languages you only need occasionally.

03

Static wayfinding signage can't answer dynamic questions — visitors want a conversation, not a map.

What changes

24/7
Coverage with zero rota
50+
Languages out of the box
Offline
Fallback when network drops

How AIvatars solves it

Offline fallback

Kiosk profile runs a cached avatar and curated FAQ pack when the upstream link is degraded. Visitors still get help; you don't get a dead screen.

Wayfinding-aware

Plug your floor plan and tenant directory into the avatar's knowledge base. Visitors ask for directions; the avatar guides them, in their language.

Hardened deployment

Tested on standard kiosk hardware: capacitive touch, NUC-class compute, vertical 1080p. Ships as a self-contained appliance via the kiosk image.

Recommended deployment

Kiosk profile (LAN appliance) + central licensing

Why

The kiosk image strips admin and billing routes and pins the device to a single avatar; central infrastructure does licensing attestation only.

FAQ

Standard kiosk-class hardware: NUC or similar small-form-factor PC, capacitive touchscreen, USB microphone, USB speaker. Vertical 1080p is the tested default; 4K supported.

See the kiosk pattern live

The live demo on this site runs the same stack as a deployed kiosk — Fahd's profile is the closest match.

Retail & Public Spaces — AIvatars