- IT Support
How to Onboard a New IT Support Provider Without Disruption
11 Mar, 2026







£4304.52 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
This is the kind of kiosk/“pro LFD” kit Samsung tends to sell when you want it to look clean out of the box and not behave like a hacky demo unit. If you’re fitting out reception points, retail info desks, wayfinding, or any environment where the screen has to run reliably all day, the built-in Windows 10 IoT Enterprise angle is the big deal: you can keep control centrally, update properly, and avoid the “random mini-PC forever” mess. At £3,587 ex-VAT it’s not cheap, so it really only makes sense if you value uptime, decent hardware integration, and someone managing deployments rather than DIY tinkering.
That said, £3.6k for a 24" class kiosk is where I’d pause. If your requirements are basic—static promos, a single signage player, or occasional updates—there are usually cheaper ways to achieve the same outcome using a simpler Android/Raspberry/embedded signage setup and an external player. Also, Windows IoT systems are great when you have IT support behind them; if you don’t, you may end up paying for manageability you won’t actually use. My rule: buy it if you’re rolling out kiosks at multiple sites and need real lifecycle management; don’t buy it if it’s a one-off display with lightweight content and minimal IT involvement.

BenQ
BenQ SL5504 - 55" Diagonal Class SL04 Series LED-backlit LCD display - digital signage - Android - 4K UHD (2160p) 3840 x 2160

BenQ
BenQ SL6504 - 65" Diagonal Class SL04 Series LED-backlit LCD display - digital signage - Android - 4K UHD (2160p) 3840 x 2160

Samsung
Samsung QB85C-N - 85" Diagonal Class QBC Series LED-backlit LCD display - Crystal UHD - digital signage - Tizen OS - 4K UHD (2160p) 3840 x 2160

Sony
Sony Bravia Professional Displays FW-75EZ20L - 75" Diagonal Class EZ20L Series LED-backlit LCD display - digital signage - Android TV - 4K UHD (2160p) 3840 x 2160 - HDR - Direct LED - hairline black