Are there risks or limitations when using iPad kiosks for demos, and how can I avoid them?Solved

Participant
Discussion
1 month ago Mar 09, 2026

Hey everyone, we’re planning to roll out about 50 iPads as interactive demo kiosks across our trade show booths next quarter. I’ve been reading up on locking them down, but I’m getting a bit paranoid about the real-world risks. Has anyone actually deployed these in high-traffic public spaces?

I’m mostly worried about people walking off with them, or folks somehow exiting the demo app to mess with the iPad’s settings. I read that Guided Access is a built-in feature, but is it enough for an enterprise-level rollout, or are there limitations I’m not seeing yet? Would love to hear from anyone who has battled this in the wild!

Replies (3)

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Participant
1 month ago Mar 09, 2026
Marked SolutionPending Review

Hey! Your paranoia is totally justified. I’ve seen it with our retail deployments last year. The short answer: yes, there are risks, but they are totally manageable if you prep right. 

First off, for 50 devices, do not rely on Guided Access. The main limitation with Guided Access is that it’s meant for temporary, on-device setups. If anyone sees or guesses the passcode, they can triple-click the home or power button and exit the mode entirely. Instead, you need to use Single App Kiosk Mode. Since your devices are supervised, you can push this via an MDM or Apple Configurator. It’s a persistent, remote lock that physically cannot be bypassed from the device itself. 

Regarding physical risks, people absolutely will try to tamper with them, and trade shows get incredibly dusty. We avoided a lot of headaches by investing in heavy-duty enclosures that physically secure the iPads to the tables. Make sure the cases specifically cover the charging ports and speakers; this protects them from both dirt/debris and people trying to plug random things into your devices!

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Participant
1 month ago Mar 12, 2026
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Thank you for your insight.

My other big concern is the software side of things. Our demo app pulls in some live web content, and I’m terrified users will click a stray social media link in a footer, end up surfing the web, and leave the kiosk on some random site for the next potential customer. Plus, if the app freezes up, our booth reps aren’t exactly IT pros. Any advice on limiting the app itself and making sure our on-ground team doesn’t panic if things go south?

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Participant
1 month ago Mar 14, 2026
Marked SolutionPending Review

Haha, Unintended content access is probably the #1 reason kiosk deployments look unprofessional. The best way around this is to have your app developers restrict all outward navigation, or use a secure kiosk browser that strictly whitelists only your specific URLs.

When you set up Single App Kiosk Mode, you can also customize the hardware behavior. I highly recommend disabling the sleep and volume buttons, and locking the device rotation so users can’t accidentally break your UI layout.

As for your booth staff, the best defense is a little bit of prep. Train them on some basic troubleshooting steps so they can confidently resolve simple customer issues or do a quick reset without having to call IT. Oh, and one last non-technical (but crucial) best practice: give them plenty of microfiber cloths and screen cleaner! Public kiosks get incredibly gross, and regularly sanitizing them maintains a hygienic appearance that actually encourages people to interact with your demos. Good luck with the trade shows!

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