Aurelia
Clark

Repurposing Old Laptops as Kiosks: The 5-Year Laptop Strategy with Hexnode

Aurelia Clark

Jan 14, 2026

11 min read

Repurposing Old Laptops as Kiosks: The 5-Year Laptop Strategy with Hexnode

In the Enterprise IT playbook, there is a “Golden Rule” that has gone unquestioned for two decades: The 3-Year Refresh Cycle.

The logic dictates that after 36 months, a laptop’s warranty expires, its battery degrades, and its processor struggles to run the latest bloated version of Microsoft Teams or Adobe Creative Cloud. So, the CFO signs a check for $2 million, 5,000 perfectly functional laptops are sent to a recycler (or a landfill), and 5,000 new units are unboxed.

In 2026, this model is economically and environmentally defenseless, especially when repurposing old laptops as kiosks offers a more sustainable alternative.

A 3-year-old Intel Core i5 laptop is indeed too slow for a Power User multitasking across three 4K monitors. But it is overpowered for a Digital Signage player. It is a supercomputer for a Visitor Check-In Kiosk. It is a Ferrari for a Warehouse Inventory Terminal.

The future of hardware management isn’t “Replace.” It is “Repurpose.”

This guide details how to use Hexnode UEM to break the 3-year cycle. We will explore the technical workflow to strip down aging Windows and macOS devices, lock them into high-performance Kiosk Mode, and extend their useful life from 3 years to 5, 6, or even 7 years.

The Argument: Why “Sweat the Asset”?

Before we get to the How, we must address the Why. Repurposing isn’t just about being frugal; it’s about two critical Enterprise KPIs: CapEx Efficiency and Scope 3 Emissions.

1. The CapEx Math

Replacing a fleet of 1,000 visitor kiosks with dedicated hardware (e.g., iPads or specialized touchscreens) costs roughly $500,000. Repurposing 1,000 retired employee laptops costs $0 in hardware. You only pay for the software license.

2. The Carbon Reality (ESG)

The uncomfortable truth of Green IT is that 80% of a laptop’s carbon footprint is generated during manufacturing. Using the device consumes relatively little power compared to the energy required to mine the lithium, cobalt, and gold to build it.

  • Retiring at 3 Years: You amortize that massive carbon debt over a short period.
  • Retiring at 6 Years: You cut the annualized carbon impact of that device in half.

For companies reporting under the EU CSRD or California Climate Laws, extending hardware life is the single most effective way to lower Scope 3 (Supply Chain) emissions.

The Technical Concept: From General Purpose to Single Purpose

Why does a laptop feel “slow” after 3 years? It isn’t usually hardware failure. It is software bloat. The accumulation of background agents (Antivirus, DLP, Updater services, Teams helpers) consumes the CPU cycles.

The Strategy: We don’t try to fix the slowness. We eliminate the multitasking. By converting the device into a Hexnode Kiosk, we strip away the Windows Explorer shell or the Mac Finder. The OS boots directly into a Single Application (e.g., a Chrome Browser or a Citrix Receiver).

The Result: A laptop that struggled to run Windows 11 with 50 apps open will fly when it only has to run one. You aren’t just extending the life; you are effectively upgrading the performance for that specific use case.

The importance of workplace automation: Empowering enterprises for the future

Scenario 1: The “Digital Signage” Transformation (Windows)

The Use Case: You need screens in the cafeteria to display menus, or in the lobby to play corporate videos. The “Old” Way: Buy a $800 Digital Signage Player. The Hexnode Way: Take a retired Dell Latitude (missing keys? broken trackpad? doesn’t matter), hide it behind the TV, and control it remotely.

Step-by-Step Implementation:

  1. The Wipe: Use Hexnode to perform a “Wipe and Re-Enroll” to clear user data.
  2. The Policy: Configure a Single App Kiosk Policy for Windows.
    1. App: Microsoft Edge (or a dedicated Signage Player app).
    2. Arguments: –kiosk https://your-signage-url.com –edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen.
  3. Power Management: Configure the “Keep Awake” setting to ensure the device never sleeps while plugged in.
  4. Peripheral Lockdown: Disable USB ports via Hexnode to prevent tampering.

Result: A zero-cost 4K media player that can be managed alongside your mobile fleet.

Scenario 2: The “Warehouse Terminal” (macOS)

The Use Case: Warehouse staff need a terminal to look up inventory on a web-based ERP (SAP/Oracle).

The “Old” Way: Buy ruggedized tablets or Thin Clients.

The Hexnode Way: Repurpose retired MacBook Airs. Even with a degraded battery, if they are bolted to a desk and plugged in, they are perfect Thin Clients.

Step-by-Step Implementation:

  1. The Policy: Create a Web Kiosk Policy in Hexnode.
  2. The Whitelist: Allow only inventory.yourcompany.com.
  3. The Lockdown:
    1. Disable the Apple Menu, Dock, and Force Quit.
    2. Disable external drive mounting.
    3. Map the “Print” function to a specific warehouse network printer.
  4. The Login: Configure a generic “Warehouse User” account that auto-logins on boot.

Result: A secure, high-resolution terminal that costs nothing and is immune to “distraction browsing” (no YouTube, no Facebook).

⚠️ The 24/7 Power Audit

Repurposed laptops in kiosks are often plugged into power 100% of the time, which can hide battery degradation. While UEMs are not hardware monitors, you can use Hexnode’s Custom Scripts to conduct regular “Health Audits”:

  • The Health Audit: Schedule an automated monthly PowerShell or Bash script via Hexnode to pull the Cycle Count and Full Charge Capacity.
  • Remote Reporting: View the results directly in the Action History tab of the Hexnode portal. This allows IT to identify “at-risk” units (e.g., those whose capacity has dropped below 50%) and replace them before they fail on the floor.
  • Native Low-Battery Alerts: Use Hexnode’s Alert Profiles to get an immediate email notification if a kiosk loses power and the battery level drops, signaling a tripped breaker or a disconnected plug.

Infrastructure as Code: Provisioning Kiosk Fleets via API

Scenario 3: The “Guest Check-In” (Android/Chromebooks)

The Use Case: Front desk visitor registration.

The “Old” Way: Expensive specialized kiosks.

The Hexnode Way: Retired Sales Chromebooks or Tablets.

Step-by-Step Implementation:

  1. The App: Deploy your Visitor Management App (e.g., Envoy, Traction Guest) via Managed Google Play.
  2. The Kiosk: Enable Single App Kiosk Mode.
  3. The UX Polish:
    1. Disable the “Status Bar” (so guests can’t see Wi-Fi or Battery icons).
    2. Disable hardware buttons (Volume, Power) to prevent guests from messing with the device.
🛠️ Technical Requirement: Device Owner Mode

To ensure an Android kiosk is truly “unbreakable,” the device must be enrolled in Android Enterprise “Device Owner” mode. Unlike a standard setup, this gives Hexnode system-level control to silently install apps and completely disable the Home and Back buttons.

⭐️ The Chrome Key

While the hardware might be “retired” and free, Google requires a Chrome Enterprise Upgrade or Kiosk & Signage Upgrade license to unlock the firmware-level lockdown features that Hexnode orchestrates. Why it’s needed: This license allows Hexnode to communicate with the Google Admin Console to “Force Install” the kiosk app and prevent users from ever reaching a login screen. The Trade-off: Even with the license cost (typically around $30-$50/year), the total cost is still 90% less than buying a new industrial kiosk.

Security: The “Zombie” Risk vs. The Kiosk Fortress

A common objection from the CISO is: “Old devices are security risks. They don’t have the latest TPM chips or might stop getting OS updates.”

This is a valid concern for a general-purpose device. It is less relevant for a Kiosk.

The “Reduced Attack Surface” Defense: When you lock a device in Kiosk Mode with Hexnode, you effectively brick the attack vectors.

  • No Explorer/Finder: A hacker cannot browse the file system.
  • No USB: Thumb drive attacks are neutralized.
  • Whitelisted Web: The user cannot visit phishing sites or download malware.

Even if the device is running an older OS patch level, the mitigating controls of the Kiosk container make it secure enough for low-sensitivity tasks (like displaying a menu or entering a visitor name).

A Kiosk is the ultimate ‘Least Privilege’ environment. The device is allowed to do exactly one thing, and the OS ignores any request to do anything else.

💡 The 2026 Security Reality : Navigating Windows 10 End-of-Life.

Since Windows 10 officially reached its end-of-life in October 2025, many organizations fear these devices are now “sitting ducks.” However, for Kiosk use, the risk is significantly lower:

  • ESU Management: Hexnode simplifies the deployment of Microsoft’s Extended Security Updates (ESU), ensuring your repurposed kiosks stay patched through 2026 and beyond.
  • Hardened Lockdown: Because a Hexnode Kiosk disables the shell, browser-based attacks and user-error vulnerabilities are mitigated, making an EOL device in Kiosk mode often more secure than a fully updated Windows 11 device in the hands of an untrained user.


The Ultimate Guide to Kiosk Management
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The Ultimate Guide to Kiosk Management

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The User Experience Pivot: Don’t Make It Look “Cheap”

The risk of repurposing is perception. If you put a beat-up laptop on the reception desk, it looks like the company is struggling.

The Fix: Hide the hardware.

  • For Signage: Mount the laptop behind the TV.
  • For Check-In: Buy a secure VESA enclosure ($50) that hides the laptop body and only exposes the screen.
  • For Desks: Use the laptop in “Clamshell Mode” connected to a standard monitor and keyboard. The user never sees the scratched chassis; they just see a working terminal.

Actionable Workflow: The “Hardware Purgatory”

Don’t just throw retired laptops in a pile. Build a process.

Workflow diagram for repurposing laptops into Hexnode kiosks.
Workflow diagram for repurposing laptops into Hexnode kiosks.
  1. The Intake: When a user turns in a laptop (3 years old), IT inspects it.
    1. Broken Screen? -> Recycle.
    2. Functional but slow? -> Move to “Repurpose Inventory.”
  2. The Automated Provisioning:
    1. Technician plugs the laptop into ethernet.
    2. Boot into Hexnode Enrollment (Autopilot/DEP).
    3. Assign to “Kiosk Group.”
  3. The Transformation: Hexnode automatically wipes the drive, installs the Kiosk Profile, and locks the device.
  4. The Storage: Label the device “Kiosk Ready” and store it. The next time a department asks for a terminal, you ship this instead of buying new.

Scaling Up: The “Zero-Touch” Transformation

Don’t touch every device. The biggest hurdle to repurposing hardware is the labor cost of “wiping and reloading.” If IT has to spend two hours per laptop, the CapEx savings vanish.

Hexnode bridges this gap by integrating with Windows Autopilot and Apple Business Manager (DEP) to enable a Zero-Touch transition:

  1. The Remote Wipe: From the Hexnode dashboard, trigger a “Wipe.” This clears all previous employee data and user-specific profiles.
  2. The Identity Pivot: Because the device is already registered in Autopilot or DEP, it doesn’t just reboot into a “new PC” setup—it automatically reaches back out to Hexnode.
  3. The Kiosk Handshake: Hexnode recognizes the serial number as part of your “Kiosk Fleet” and automatically pushes the Kiosk Policy, Wi-Fi credentials, and the single-purpose app.

The Result: You can transform a stack of 50 laptops in the time it takes to click a button. IT never has to touch the keyboard.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Can I turn an old laptop into a Kiosk?

Yes. Using a UEM solution like Hexnode, you can configure old Windows or Mac laptops into Kiosk Mode. This strips away the standard desktop interface and locks the device into a single application (like a web browser), allowing older hardware to run smoothly as digital signage or check-in terminals without the performance overhead of a full OS.

Is it secure to use outdated hardware for Kiosks?

Generally, yes, if properly locked down. While older hardware may lack the latest OS features, Kiosk Mode drastically reduces the attack surface by blocking access to the file system, USB ports, and unauthorized websites. This “Least Privilege” configuration mitigates many risks associated with older operating systems.

How does repurposing hardware help with ESG goals?

Repurposing hardware directly impacts Scope 3 Emissions (Supply Chain). Approximately 80% of a laptop’s lifetime carbon footprint is generated during manufacturing. By extending a device’s life from 3 years to 6 years, you effectively halve its annualized carbon impact, improving your company’s sustainability reporting metrics.

Can Hexnode run kiosks on laptops that don’t support Windows 11?

Yes. While these devices may not meet Windows 11’s TPM requirements for general use, they can remain functional and secure as single-purpose kiosks on Windows 10 with Hexnode’s lockdown policies and Microsoft’s ESU program.

Conclusion: Sustainability is a Strategy, Not a Slogan

Every time you repurpose a laptop using Hexnode, you are saving ~$1,000 in CapEx and preventing ~300kg of Carbon emissions.

You are transforming a “Cost Center” (E-Waste disposal) into a “Resource Center” (Free Hardware Inventory). This is the kind of strategic thinking that gets IT Leaders invited to the boardroom.

Don’t retire your hardware. Re-imagine it.

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Aurelia Clark

Fuelled by coffee, curiosity, and a mildly concerning number of open tabs

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