Screens built for the task, not the org chart
Generic MES screens make operators click through menus designed for managers. Frontlink gives every task its own screen: weighing, encapsulation, packing, each with exactly what that station needs, and nothing else.
Everything the station needs, on one glass
Operators juggle paper, terminals, and a shared PC at the end of the hall, and every extra walk costs minutes.
The operator app runs on a tablet at the line: live counts, checks when they are due, material calls, label printing, downtime reasons. Big targets, glove-friendly.
- Live order progress and counts at the station
- Checks, material calls, and labels without leaving the line
- Works offline and syncs back automatically
When the line stops, the screen asks why
Downtime reasons written on a whiteboard at shift end are guesses. The moment to capture the truth is the moment it happens.
The stop is detected automatically and the screen offers four big buttons. One tap, back to work, and the log is complete. That is the entire workflow.
The operator screen is where everything meets
Plans arrive here, checks happen here, and what operators confirm becomes the record everyone else trusts.
Common questions
Can screens be adapted to our process?
Yes, that is the point. Screens are composed per task and per station: your weighing station gets a weighing screen, your packing line gets a packing screen. Changes ship in days, not release cycles.
What hardware do we need?
Any modern tablet or touch panel with a browser. The app installs as a PWA: no per-device rollout, works offline, and survives the Wi-Fi dead zones on the floor.
Will operators accept it?
Adoption is designed in: fewer taps than paper, big touch targets, and screens that only show what the task needs. Most operators are faster in their first shift.
Put a screen at one station
Book a demo and see a task screen composed for one of your own stations.