Hi everyone!
I’m currently building a specialized POS (Point of Sale) system called PizzaOS, designed specifically to streamline operations for pizzerias.
My goal was to create a solution that feels fast, reactive, and reliable for local business owners. I’ve built it using Angular (with Signals for reactivity) for the frontend, ensuring a smooth user experience, and a robust backend to handle the core logic.
I’m at a stage where I’m refining the architecture and preparing it for real-world deployment. I’d love to get some eyes on the code and hear your thoughts on the approach.
Check it out:
Live Demo (Azure): https://pizzaos-web-c6e2dec8hcajbsau.canadaeast-01.azurewebsites.net/
GitHub Repository: https://github.com/alcamarga/pizzeria-app-core
I’m open to any feedback regarding architecture, performance, or potential features you think a modern POS for restaurants should have. Thanks for taking the time to check it out!
Niche POS is a strong direction because pizzerias have very specific workflow pressure: fast orders, modifiers, kitchen flow, delivery/pickup timing, staff handoff, and reliability during rush hours. A generic restaurant POS usually misses those small operational details.
The part I would pressure-test early is the brand frame. PizzaOS is clear, but it may box the product very tightly into “pizza software” before you know whether the system could expand into broader restaurant operations, multi-location food businesses, delivery workflows, inventory, reporting, or payments.
Since you are still refining architecture before real-world deployment, this is probably the right time to decide whether the name should stay literal or become a stronger SaaS product brand.
Beryxa .com would fit that direction better because it feels more like a serious operating platform for restaurant workflows, orders, reporting, and business intelligence, without locking the product only to pizza from day one.
Thank you so much for this insightful feedback! You hit the nail on the head regarding the workflow pressures in pizzerias. I agree that the 'PizzaOS' name is very literal. My initial strategy was to master the pizzeria workflow first to ensure reliability before scaling. However, you've definitely given me a lot to think about regarding long-term branding and how to frame the product as a more robust operating platform. I appreciate the perspective