One URL, full screen, no chrome
Frame loads a single configured page full-screen and strips everything else — no address bar, no navigation, no way to wander off. Just your content.
A kiosk browser for the iPad on your wall.
Frame turns an iPad into a single-purpose display. It loads one page full-screen, strips the browser chrome, locks to that page, and self-heals so it can run unattended on a wall for weeks. No address bar, no distractions — just your content.
In beta, piloting on real hardware. Coming to the App Store.
The problem
You set up a lobby screen and by the next Sunday it’s drifted off its page, frozen on a stale render, showing a browser toolbar someone tapped, or stuck on an error after the Wi-Fi blinked. Regular browsers were never meant to run one page, forever, untouched.
Frame is the opposite of a browser: one page, locked, self-healing, and quietly reliable — so you set it once and forget it’s even there.
What Frame does
Frame loads a single configured page full-screen and strips everything else — no address bar, no navigation, no way to wander off. Just your content.
Keep a named list of pages and tap to switch. Swap “this week's” page for “next week's” in a single tap. Add, edit, swipe to delete.
A heartbeat watchdog reloads a frozen render, it auto-reconnects when the network drops, shows a clean offline screen, and reloads fresh on every launch. The screen never gets stuck.
Off, every few minutes or hours, or daily at a set time — so the page stays current without anyone touching the iPad.
After a set time, Frame lets the iPad actually power down instead of burning the screen for three days, then wakes and reloads on a tap. Solves the “kiosk left on all weekend” problem.
A four-tap corner gesture opens PIN-locked settings for displays, refresh, sleep, and offline branding. Volunteers can't fiddle; you can always get in.
The whole idea
Black and white, no clutter, nothing to configure but the address. The screen becomes your content and stays that way — through network drops, reboots, and the weekend nobody’s in the building.
It’s already running on real hardware. Join the list and we’ll tell you when it’s available to install — along with pricing once it’s set.
Frame is coming to the App Store. Join the list and we'll let you know the moment it's ready.