lfsoft(kioskprogram.com) Co., Ltd. designs and builds unmanned guide and access kiosks for museums, exhibition halls, and public institutions. We handle both the software and the hardware as a single scope of work, so a project owner can move from content planning to an operating device without coordinating several separate vendors.
This post introduces who we are, the four capabilities that define our work, the sectors we serve, and a recent flagship project for Hapcheon County.
What We Do
Cultural sites carry a large amount of information that visitors want at their own pace: the story behind a collection, the layout of a hall, the meaning of a single artifact. A well-built guide kiosk turns that information into something a visitor can explore by touch, in a quiet self-service flow, without waiting for a staff member to be free.
lfsoft(kioskprogram.com) focuses specifically on this category. Rather than offering generic kiosk hardware or off-the-shelf templates, we treat each installation as a guidance system shaped around the site's collection, its visitors, and the way the institution actually operates day to day. Our work spans content structure, interface design, the on-site device, and the operating environment that keeps it running unattended.
Our Four Core Strengths
1. Stable Closed-Network (Offline) Deployment
Public institutions operate under strict security expectations, and many sites cannot rely on a continuous external connection. Our kiosks are built to complete their full guidance experience on the device itself, without depending on an outside network. This closed-network approach fits the security posture of public-sector environments and keeps the experience consistent even where connectivity is limited or intentionally restricted.
2. An Admin Dashboard the Client Operates Directly
A guide kiosk should not require a vendor visit every time a label changes or a new exhibit opens. We provide an administration page that lets institutional staff update content themselves: text, images, and the items shown on each screen. Image handling is supported with automatic optimization, so staff do not need design tooling to keep the kiosk current. The result is a system the client genuinely owns and operates, rather than one they depend on us to maintain.
3. Turnkey Delivery of Software and Hardware Together
Coordinating a content developer, a hardware supplier, and an installation team separately is a common source of project risk. lfsoft(kioskprogram.com) delivers the full chain in one place: content planning and development, the kiosk device, and the operating environment it runs in. A single accountable partner means fewer handoffs, clearer responsibility, and a smoother path from kickoff to a live installation.
4. Digital Transformation of Static and Legacy Guidance
Many sites still rely on printed panels, fixed signage, or aging guidance materials that are costly to revise and easy to outdate. We modernize that experience into interactive digital guidance, where content can be reorganized, expanded, and refreshed over time. This shift extends the useful life of guidance content and gives visitors a more engaging way to navigate a collection.
Sectors We Serve
Our work is built for organizations that present cultural, historical, or public information to visitors:
• Museums and archaeological or heritage sites
• Exhibition halls and visitor centers
• Local and regional government cultural projects
• System integration (SI) partners delivering larger public installations
For SI partners in particular, our single-scope delivery model fits cleanly into a broader project, since the guidance kiosk arrives as a complete, self-operating component rather than a collection of parts to assemble.
Flagship Case: Hapcheon Museum (Okjeon Tumuli)
A recent representative project is the unmanned guide kiosk built for Hapcheon County at Hapcheon Museum, beside the Okjeon Ancient Tombs in Ssangchaek-myeon, Gyeongnam. The system presents the story of Gaya in Hapcheon, including the Dara Kingdom's Okjeon Tumuli and the wider Gaya tombs, across a vertical single-touch interface. It covers seven content areas, runs fully offline in a closed-network configuration suited to public-institution security, and includes an administration page so museum staff can edit content themselves. Automated standby behavior returns the screen to its starting state after a period of inactivity and brings the kiosk up on its own when powered on, so it can operate unattended throughout the day. The visual direction, designed around the heritage of Dara, gives the experience a distinct identity rather than a generic interface.
Why Work With lfsoft(kioskprogram.com)
The strengths above are connected by a single idea: a museum guide kiosk should serve visitors reliably and be genuinely owned by the institution that runs it. A closed-network build keeps it secure and dependable on site. A real admin dashboard means the client stays in control of the content. Turnkey delivery removes the friction of managing multiple vendors. And the move from static to interactive guidance gives a site a more durable, more engaging way to tell its story. Together, these are the qualities that make a guidance kiosk worth deploying and easy to live with after launch.
For museum and exhibition kiosk projects, contact lfsoft(kioskprogram.com) — lsj@kioskprogram.com / kioskprogram.com