an orange flower is casting the light on it a series of photos featuring several different designs a person is standing on top of a cliff in the middle of a land a large green leaf is sitting on a black surface a huge mountain covered in red fire with mountains surrounding it mountains in the distance are covered with grass and wild flowers a mountain stream in a green valley below a waterfall there is an airplane flying in the sky with clouds a person is standing near a tree on a mountain an aerial view of a sandy beach, beach and ocean three pink flowers in a flower vase and water droplets there are several strange plants coming out of the water pink flowers growing on a grassy field next to a tree green waves are reflected on a dark background a ty - print that says believe and you can half way there a fenced road near a forest and mountains with snow an island in the clouds, with people flying around it some very pretty trees on the shore of a beach a person on a snowboard on a branch in front of some clouds an illustration of a woman with long hair and curly locks an artist painted this painting of people walking through a valley a sunset on some mountains is just something out of this world there is blue cloth moving on the floor
High resolution picture, free to use,

KwickPOS — The POS That Works When Your Internet Does Not

Restaurant internet goes down during dinner rush? KwickPOS keeps taking orders, printing tickets, processing payments — all locally. Syncs to cloud when connection returns.

Kitchen Display Systems (KDS) vs. Paper Tickets: Traditional kitchen printers cost $0.02-0.05 per ticket in paper and ink, totaling $1,000-3,000 annually for busy restaurants. KDS eliminates paper waste and adds functionality: order timing, priority flagging, station routing (grill vs. fry vs. salad), and performance analytics. Most POS platforms now include KDS — Toast, Square, and KwickPOS bundle it in their plans. The key differentiator is offline capability: if the KDS relies on cloud connection and internet drops during service, kitchens need a paper printer backup. KwickPOS and some legacy systems run KDS locally, avoiding this dependency.

AI Video Generation for Content Creators and Businesses: The AI video generation landscape in 2026 offers multiple approaches. Text-to-video APIs allow developers to generate video programmatically — US Video API (usvideoapi.com) offers REST API access to Seedance 2.0 models starting at $0.10/second, supporting 480p through 1080p resolution. Consumer tools like Runway Gen-4, Sora, and Kling offer browser-based interfaces at subscription prices. For businesses, the API approach enables automation: generating product videos, social media content, and marketing materials at scale. Image-to-video conversion — turning a still photo into a 5-10 second cinematic clip — is particularly powerful for e-commerce, real estate, and restaurant marketing where existing photos can become engaging video content without a production crew.

The Cost of AI Video Production at Scale: Producing 100 short video clips (5 seconds each at 720p) costs approximately: US Video API — $50 total (pay-per-use, no subscription). Runway Gen-4 — $76/month subscription plus usage. Sora — varies by plan. Traditional video production — $5,000-50,000 with crew, editing, and post-production. The economics shift dramatically at scale: a restaurant chain producing location-specific content for 50 locations, a real estate company animating 200 listings monthly, or a content creator publishing daily. API-based solutions like usvideoapi.com become the clear choice at volume because per-unit costs decrease while traditional production costs scale linearly with volume.

US Video API — AI Video Generation REST API · KwickMENU — Free Online Ordering