Oracle Adds AI Troubleshooter to Restaurant POS System

Darius Baruo   Mar 18, 2026 20:15  UTC 12:15

0 Min Read

Oracle has rolled out an AI-powered troubleshooting assistant embedded directly into its Simphony point-of-sale system, aiming to cut down on IT support calls for restaurant operators dealing with everyday technical hiccups.

The Smart Assistant, announced March 18, uses generative AI trained on Oracle's Simphony documentation to answer questions like "Why isn't my workstation printer working?" or "Why can't I log in?" Staff can trigger it with a single click or when error messages pop up on screen.

What makes this more than a glorified FAQ bot: the system pulls from de-identified behavioral data across thousands of Simphony users and can be customized with each restaurant brand's specific operating procedures. If a chain has particular protocols for handling a connectivity issue, those guidelines get baked into the responses.

"This innovation will enable restaurants to maintain peak performance while focusing on what matters most: exceptional guest service," said Etienne Piat, Oracle's vice president of service excellence and innovations for consumer industries.

The feature targets the kind of mundane problems that eat up IT resources—login failures, device connectivity, general system questions. Staff can also flag unhelpful responses to improve accuracy over time.

Oracle says early adopters are already testing the feature, with general availability planned for Simphony Cloud customers globally within 12 months. The assistant will support over 100 languages.

This builds on Oracle's recent push to expand Simphony's self-service capabilities. In October 2025, the company enhanced self-service features for stadiums, restaurants, and hotels. January 2026 brought an integration with Incentivio for loyalty and payment experiences.

For Oracle shareholders watching the enterprise AI race, this represents another incremental move to embed AI across its cloud products—though the restaurant POS market is a relatively small piece of Oracle's broader business. The stock sits at $154.31 with a $445 billion market cap as of March 17.



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