Industries

Overview of industries we serve. Typical failure points, why integration matters, and what a truthful display means in each vertical.

Correct Tech Solutions Ltd designs and integrates light-industrial, API-driven display systems where physical information must remain accurate, governed, and reliable. We serve several industry verticals; we do not sell products. This page gives an overview of the industries we serve, the operational context in each, the role of displays, and the integration challenges. Each industry has its own page with typical failure points, why integration matters, and what a truthful display means in that vertical.

Common Themes

Across industries, operational displays share common characteristics: they present information that drives or supports operations; they consume data from existing platforms (property management, queue engines, production systems); they must be correct, reliable, and governed; and they sit at the boundary between hardware and software. Failure points are often similar: wrong or stale data, integration breakage, lack of governance, or environmental mismatch. We design for these across all verticals.

Why Integration Matters

Displays are rarely standalone. They are part of a larger operational system: check-in, queue management, production tracking, wayfinding, or room status. Integration with existing platforms is essential. We do not replace property management systems or queue engines; we consume their data and present it in the right form at the right place. That requires clear contracts, defined failure behaviour, and governance. We cover integration in detail in the hardware-software integration and API-driven display sections.

Truthful Display

In each industry, a truthful display means: what is shown matches the intended source-of-truth; when the source is unavailable, behaviour is defined (cached with staleness, fallback, or error); and changes are governed (access control, audit, rollback). We work with stakeholders to map these requirements and design systems that meet them. No product references; we describe capability and problem classes only.

Why this matters in real deployments

Industry-specific failure modes (e.g. room status out of sync in hospitality, queue wrong in healthcare) directly affect operations. Understanding typical failure points and designing for integration and governance from the start avoids costly rework.