One truth. On every screen in the plant.
A part gets counted once, at the machine — and the supervisor's phone, the bench tablet, the line terminal and the wall TV all show it the same second. Try it: press the button.
What is Bulk's real-time, multi-surface view?
Bulk's multi-surface layer shows one live production record on every screen in the plant. A part is counted once at the machine, and the supervisor's phone, the bench tablet, the line terminal, and the wall TV all update the same second. There's no second copy to drift out of date.
Counted once. Believed everywhere.
No architecture diagram — just what happens on a Tuesday, and who stops wasting time because of it.
An operator counts a part
One tap at the machine, gloves on. That's the last time anyone types, copies, or re-enters that number — anywhere, ever.
The plant manager sees it that second
Phone in the office, TV on the wall — the number just moves. No refresh, no "let me pull the report", no calling the line to ask what's really running.
Nobody argues about the number
Every screen reads the same live record — there is no second copy to drift out of date. The Monday "whose spreadsheet is right?" meeting just… stops happening.
Wi-Fi flickers? No count is lost
The floor terminal holds the tally through a dropped link and catches up the moment it's back. An operator never loses work to a flaky access point in the back of the bay.
Four habits, retired.
When the number on the wall is the system itself — not a copy of it — a whole layer of daily busywork simply has nothing left to do.
Questions, answered.
What is Bulk's real-time, multi-surface view?
It puts one live record on every screen: count a part once at the machine, and the phone, bench tablet, line terminal, and wall TV all show it the same second.
Do all the screens show the same number?
Yes. Every surface reads the same live record — there is no second copy to drift out of date, so nobody argues about whose number is right.
What happens if the Wi-Fi drops on the floor?
The floor terminal holds the tally through a dropped link and catches up the moment it's back, so no count is lost to a flaky access point.
How fast does a count reach the other screens?
The same second. A part counted at the machine appears on the supervisor's phone, the wall TV, and every other surface with no refresh and no report to pull.
Does the operator have to re-enter counts anywhere?
No. One tap at the machine is the last time anyone types, copies, or re-enters that number — it flows to every screen on its own.
Do people need logins to see the shop board?
No. The wall TV shows one live board for the whole shop with no logins, while the phone, tablet, and terminal give each role the same truth.
Your floor, live, on every wall.
We'll put the same live board on a phone, a terminal and a TV at once — then count a part and let you watch all three move.