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A kiosk browser for the iPad on your wall.

Point it at a URL. Lock it. Walk away.

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

An iPad on a wall never just stays put.

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

Set it once. It takes care of itself.

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.

Saved displays

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.

Self-healing

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.

Auto-refresh on a schedule

Off, every few minutes or hours, or daily at a set time — so the page stays current without anyone touching the iPad.

Smart sleep

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.

Hidden, PIN-protected admin

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

Point an iPad at a URL. Lock it. Walk away.

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.

Frame is in beta and coming to the App Store.

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.

Questions about Frame.

What can I point it at?
Anything with a URL — a Steeple site, a SermonOS feed, an announcements page, a Display output, a calendar. If it lives on the web, Frame can lock to it.
What happens if the network drops?
Frame auto-reconnects and shows a clean offline screen in the meantime — no browser error page, no stuck render. When the connection returns, it reloads itself.
How do I lock it down?
Frame strips the browser chrome and locks navigation to your page; paired with iOS Guided Access, the iPad stays on Frame and nothing else. Settings hide behind a PIN.
When can I get it?
Frame is in beta, piloting on real hardware, and headed for the App Store. Join the list and we'll tell you when it's available.

A lobby screen that just works.

Frame is coming to the App Store. Join the list and we'll let you know the moment it's ready.