Difference between revisions of "Launching Display Screens"
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One of the most useful ways of making use of the data that PTS collects is to output the progress of ongoing prescriptions to external display screens, also known as status screens | One of the most useful ways of making use of the data that PTS collects is to output the progress of ongoing prescriptions to external display screens, also known as status screens. | ||
On the PTS side, these screens are simply a specific type of user view. The types available are Outpatient (patient facing), Dispensary (dispensary facing) and Delivery (for the collection area). The trick is to get these screens logged in and displayed automatically. | |||
=Setting up PTS= | |||
Two dedicated user accounts (Outpatient Display and Dispensary Display) are pre-installed for this purpose and it is strongly recommended that you continue to use dedicated PTS user accounts as the username and password will need to be shared around and will be stored on the PC as plaintext. [[Users#Adding_new_users|You should create a user account]] for each screen you want to set up. Consider locking down the user permissions so the accounts can do very little else. | |||
The | The process begins with creating an appropriate user view that is configured to show the prescriptions that are relevant for the display you are trying to set up. See the [[Setting Up User Views|setting up user views]] page for more detailed information, but suffice to say the user views are set up almost exactly like a normal home page user view, just the Type of View setting should be set to Outpatient Display, Dispensary Display, or Delivery Display instead of Standard View. Make sure the user view is the default, or ideally the only user view for the user account in question. | ||
The pre-installed user accounts are already configured in this way. | |||
Test logging in with the new account. If it loads up the desired status screen correctly move on to the next section. | |||
==Creating a PTS URL that automatically logs in with the display account== | |||
It is possible to log in to PTS and bypass the login screen by passing the username and password in the URL. | |||
The URL is formatted like this: | |||
<blockquote><nowiki>e.g. "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"</nowiki></blockquote> | <blockquote><nowiki>e.g. "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"</nowiki></blockquote> | ||
Here you specify the | Here you specify the address to your PTS installation along with a username and password passed through as a query string along with a command to ignore the Windows username. | ||
<ol> | <ol> | ||
Line 43: | Line 32: | ||
Set this to True. This instructs PTS not to attempt to login based on the Windows user account, like it might do normally.</li> | Set this to True. This instructs PTS not to attempt to login based on the Windows user account, like it might do normally.</li> | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
Test the URL works as intended by copy and pasting it into a new Incognito or InPrivate window. If the display screen loads and the login screen is bypassed, move on to the next section. | |||
=Setting up the TV= | |||
Installing, mounting and connecting the TV is a discussion with your estates department. | |||
We're often asked if the TV requires an ethernet connection. | |||
<ol> | |||
<li>If the TV is a Smart TV (see next section) and <strong>is allowed onto the internal network</strong> then there is the possibility that a network point would be useful. By and large people connect these screen up via a PC so it's therefore the PC that requires a network connection rather than the TV, and estates will have to route a HDMI cable to the PC.</li> | |||
<li>That being said if they would prefer the TV to be connected to the PC through HDMI-over-ethernet (e.g. for very long cable runs) then that is supported.</li> | |||
</ol> | |||
Once the TV is up and running it will likely just be a case of setting the input to the correct HDMI port and turning the volume up. | |||
Some TVs come with overscan enabled which will crop the edges of the screen. Look in the aspect ratio menu for whichever option disables overscan - it's likely to be named "Just Scan", "Screen Fit", "Full" or similar. Google could help here if you provide your TV brand or model number. | |||
==Smart TVs== | |||
Most smart TVs now come with a built in web browser. If you can connect the TV to your <strong>internal</strong> network (either wireless or wired) then you can set the web browser's home page to the appropriate URL (discussed below) and from then on simply load the web browser application on the TV to open the chosen display screen. | |||
This can be a lot easier to manage than a PC, but unfortunately some IT departments do not allow such devices onto the network. Connecting the TV to a guest network will not work - it needs to be able to see your PTS server. | |||
While you're testing this out, just check whether the TV can reach your PTS login screen with the same URL that you use inside dispensary. You don't have to log in, just being able to reach the login page means you can be relatively sure that the TV is connected properly. Once that test has passed, you can begin testing with the full auto-login URL you created earlier. | |||
Once the TV is loading the status screen correctly consider setting the URL as the home page. From then on you would only have to open the web browser to load the status screen. At this point, you shouldn't need anything else from this guide. | |||
=Setting up the PC= | |||
It is recommended that you use a 1920x1080 resolution for the display, and ensure the "scale" setting in your PC's display settings is configured to 100%. This setting is also known as "change the size of text, apps and other items", or "make text and other items larger or smaller". | |||
Different resolution and scale settings can make the text too small to read from a distance or lead to formatting issues, but all screens and circumstances are different. | |||
==Dedicated PC== | |||
If you can assign a PC to just this task then simply connect the PC to the external monitor. Some Trusts are using cost effective low powered stick PCs for this purpose. | |||
==Multiple monitors== | |||
[[File: MonitorArrangement.png |300px|thumb|An example of how to set up the display settings. Notice that monitor 2, the display screen, is arranged to the right of monitor 1.]] | |||
Consult with your IT department and have them set up the secondary monitor in "extend desktop" mode. | |||
We've identified a few circumstances where it is not be possible to launch anything on a secondary monitor automatically if the secondary monitor is arranged to the left of the main monitor in Windows display settings. No matter what you do the window will open on the primary display. If you encounter this problem, consider re-arranging the monitor layout so the secondary monitor (the external display) is to the right of the primary display (the actual PC monitor), even if that does not make sense in terms of the actual physical layout. We appreciate this is odd. This issue has affected all screen launching methods we have tested with. | |||
=Creating a desktop shortcut file= | |||
Next you will download a desktop shortcut that with some slight manual modification will open a web browser in kiosk mode and direct it straight into the newly created view. | |||
<strong>Starting point download for Chrome</strong> | |||
<blockquote><nowiki>"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=1921,0 "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"</nowiki> | |||
[[Media:PTSChromeDisplayShortcut.zip|Download this shortcut example]] | |||
<i>Note: this download will not work without some reconfiguration. It is provided for your reference.</i></blockquote> | |||
<strong>Starting point download for Edge</strong> | |||
<blockquote><nowiki>"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=1921,0 "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"</nowiki> | |||
[[Media:PTSEdgeDisplayShortcut.zip|Download this shortcut example]] | |||
<i>Note: this download will not work without some reconfiguration. It is provided for your reference.</i></blockquote> | |||
These examples <strong>will need to be modified</strong> to work with your system. | |||
==Modifying the example shortcut target== | |||
To reiterate, you will need to make changes to the provided examples and they will not work as-is. | |||
Unzip the shortcut file first, and then right-click it and choose Properties. You will find the Target field in there. It is formatted like this: | |||
<blockquote>"Path to web browser application" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=HorizontalOffset,VerticalOffset "PTS URL with login parameters"</blockquote> | |||
===Path to web browser application=== | |||
<blockquote>e.g. "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe"</blockquote> | |||
The physical path to the chosen web application executable. Include the quotes. | |||
===Kiosk switches for launching in full screen=== | |||
<blockquote>--kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen</blockquote> | |||
Including --kiosk instructs the browser to load the web page in full screen. Microsoft Edge sometimes needs the additional switch to stop it opening in a new tab in an existing window. | |||
===Private browsing switches=== | |||
<blockquote>--incognito --inprivate</blockquote> | |||
Incognito is Chrome's name for private browsing and InPrivate is Edge's version, but including both is fine. | |||
Private browsing is recommended as a simple way of preventing the display screen's PTS session from interfering with a pharmacist's 'normal' PTS session if used on the same PC. | |||
===Window position switch for launching on a secondary monitor=== | |||
<blockquote>e.g. --window-position=1921,0</blockquote> | |||
--window-position is the pixel offset from the top left corner of the primary display where the new window will appear. The default is 0,0. | |||
For our purposes this can be used to open the page on a secondary monitor. This is done by specifying the horizontal offset to be one pixel greater than the horizontal resolution of the primary monitor. For example if the primary monitor is a 1920x1080 display, specify --window-position=1921,0 to open the page on the secondary monitor. | |||
If you have a more elaborate monitor arrangement you should still be able to get the status screen to appear where you want it to by experimenting with both of the window-position values. Trial and error is likely to be the way forward. | |||
Either set the value to 0,0 or omit the switch entirely to have the screen open on the main display. | |||
===PTS URL with login parameters=== | |||
Enter the URL you created earlier. Include the quotes. | |||
== | ==Testing the shortcut file== | ||
Double click the file to verify that it opens up in the way you want it too. | |||
From now on you can now either use this shortcut to manually open the status screen, or continue on to the next section | From now on you can now either use this shortcut to manually open the status screen, or continue on to the next section to get it to load automatically. | ||
If kiosk mode prevents you from closing the page back down, either Alt+Tab or | If kiosk mode prevents you from closing the page back down, either Alt+Tab or Alt+F4 to move away from it. | ||
=Getting Windows to load the shortcut automatically= | |||
Now that the shortcut is created you may want to configure Windows to load the shortcut automatically when the PC is turned on or logged in. This part of the process may require admin access to the PC. If IT need to get involved, explain the task first as they may have their own methods for getting things to load automatically. | Now that the shortcut is created you may want to configure Windows to load the shortcut automatically when the PC is turned on or logged in. This part of the process may require admin access to the PC. If IT need to get involved, explain the task first as they may have their own methods for getting things to load automatically. | ||
Line 62: | Line 135: | ||
Simply drag and drop the shortcut file into the directory, then reboot the PC. Now when you or someone else logs in to Windows, the status screen should load on the correct monitor automatically. | Simply drag and drop the shortcut file into the directory, then reboot the PC. Now when you or someone else logs in to Windows, the status screen should load on the correct monitor automatically. | ||
=Allowing sound= | |||
Most modern web browsers deliberately block web pages from auto-playing sound when the user isn't interacting with the page as a safety measure. | Most modern web browsers deliberately block web pages from auto-playing sound when the user isn't interacting with the page as a safety measure. Unfortunately this conflicts with how these status screens are designed to be used. | ||
==Allow auto-play in Edge== | |||
Click on the three dots at the top right corner of Edge and open Settings. From the sidebar panel, click on the Cookies and Site Permission and open the Media Autoplay within Site Permissions. You can either allow autoplay for all sites (recommended) or allow auto-play on a per-site basis. | Click on the three dots at the top right corner of Edge and open Settings. From the sidebar panel, click on the Cookies and Site Permission and open the Media Autoplay within Site Permissions. You can either allow autoplay for all sites (recommended) or allow auto-play on a per-site basis. | ||
==Allow auto-play in Chrome== | |||
Add this argument to the Chrome shortcut after the --kiosk argument: | |||
<blockquote>--autoplay-policy=no-user-gesture-required</blockquote> | |||
In some cases this is not sufficient if it conflicts with a pre-existing user policy. You should consult with your IT department about the problem, but in the event that you have full control of the PC, it's possible to modify the registry to override the policy. | |||
<blockquote>Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Google\Chrome</blockquote> | |||
You may have to create the "Google" and "Chrome" keys yourself. Once inside the Chrome 'folder', create a DWORD 32-Bit Value, call it "AutoplayAllowed", and set the value to 1 (true). You should now restart the PC. | |||
==Still no sound?== | |||
At this point you should consider whether the PC is outputting sound to the correct output device, and that the TV is not muted and things like that. It's not unusual for Windows to default to the wrong audio settings; this is because it is less common to use a secondary screen as the audio output device. | |||
The display screens have built in YouTube connectivity for showing video messages to patients in accordance with the customisable [[Status Screen Messages]]. If the PTS server does not have outside internet connectivity, not only will this not work but the failed connection attempt can cause a noticeable impact to performance. This will happen whether the status screen message actually calls for a video or not; the YouTube API is embedded in the page. | |||
The issue is often first noticed when the screen fails to call out ticket numbers, or moves between pages slowly, or just generally seems to be struggling. | |||
To tell PTS not to attempt any remote connections, go to Setup > Application Settings, locate the "skip checking if PTS is online" setting (OFFLINE) and set it to Yes. | |||
More [[Performance_Tweaks|performance tweaks can be found here]]. | |||
=Screen stops updating overnight= | |||
In common with all web applications, PTS, and your server/s, have various timeout settings configured to save on system resources when an inactive session is detected. If your display screen is ever left on overnight while the pharmacy is closed, it's likely that the session will timeout at some point and will no longer be updating, even in the morning when the pharmacy is open again. | |||
It's not wise to increase the timeout interval to cover a full overnight period. For context a normal timeout is 30 minutes or so. | |||
Furthermore, the PC, TV, or even the browser itself can have various power saving measures that can have the same effect. Identifying and remedying every possible cause can be impractical and can have other unintended effects. As such if you start to be affected by this issue we advise that the simplest solution is to turn off the PC or Smart TV overnight and turn it back on in the morning. Assuming that the shortcuts etc. have all been configured as outlined in this document, the display screen should then load correctly. | |||
It's possible that IT could implement a task to have the PC reboot and log itself back in on a schedule (such as at opening time). |
Latest revision as of 09:41, 4 September 2024
One of the most useful ways of making use of the data that PTS collects is to output the progress of ongoing prescriptions to external display screens, also known as status screens.
On the PTS side, these screens are simply a specific type of user view. The types available are Outpatient (patient facing), Dispensary (dispensary facing) and Delivery (for the collection area). The trick is to get these screens logged in and displayed automatically.
Setting up PTS
Two dedicated user accounts (Outpatient Display and Dispensary Display) are pre-installed for this purpose and it is strongly recommended that you continue to use dedicated PTS user accounts as the username and password will need to be shared around and will be stored on the PC as plaintext. You should create a user account for each screen you want to set up. Consider locking down the user permissions so the accounts can do very little else.
The process begins with creating an appropriate user view that is configured to show the prescriptions that are relevant for the display you are trying to set up. See the setting up user views page for more detailed information, but suffice to say the user views are set up almost exactly like a normal home page user view, just the Type of View setting should be set to Outpatient Display, Dispensary Display, or Delivery Display instead of Standard View. Make sure the user view is the default, or ideally the only user view for the user account in question.
The pre-installed user accounts are already configured in this way.
Test logging in with the new account. If it loads up the desired status screen correctly move on to the next section.
Creating a PTS URL that automatically logs in with the display account
It is possible to log in to PTS and bypass the login screen by passing the username and password in the URL.
The URL is formatted like this:
e.g. "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"
Here you specify the address to your PTS installation along with a username and password passed through as a query string along with a command to ignore the Windows username.
- YourPTSServer
The name of your PTS server. This is the same server name that you use to access PTS on all the PCs in the pharmacy. - PTSWeb
The name given to your PTS application during initial installation. This is normally PTSWeb, but again it will be what all the pharmacy PCs are pointed to. - User
The username of the display screen user. - Password
The corresponding password. - IgnoreWindowsUsername
Set this to True. This instructs PTS not to attempt to login based on the Windows user account, like it might do normally.
Test the URL works as intended by copy and pasting it into a new Incognito or InPrivate window. If the display screen loads and the login screen is bypassed, move on to the next section.
Setting up the TV
Installing, mounting and connecting the TV is a discussion with your estates department.
We're often asked if the TV requires an ethernet connection.
- If the TV is a Smart TV (see next section) and is allowed onto the internal network then there is the possibility that a network point would be useful. By and large people connect these screen up via a PC so it's therefore the PC that requires a network connection rather than the TV, and estates will have to route a HDMI cable to the PC.
- That being said if they would prefer the TV to be connected to the PC through HDMI-over-ethernet (e.g. for very long cable runs) then that is supported.
Once the TV is up and running it will likely just be a case of setting the input to the correct HDMI port and turning the volume up.
Some TVs come with overscan enabled which will crop the edges of the screen. Look in the aspect ratio menu for whichever option disables overscan - it's likely to be named "Just Scan", "Screen Fit", "Full" or similar. Google could help here if you provide your TV brand or model number.
Smart TVs
Most smart TVs now come with a built in web browser. If you can connect the TV to your internal network (either wireless or wired) then you can set the web browser's home page to the appropriate URL (discussed below) and from then on simply load the web browser application on the TV to open the chosen display screen.
This can be a lot easier to manage than a PC, but unfortunately some IT departments do not allow such devices onto the network. Connecting the TV to a guest network will not work - it needs to be able to see your PTS server.
While you're testing this out, just check whether the TV can reach your PTS login screen with the same URL that you use inside dispensary. You don't have to log in, just being able to reach the login page means you can be relatively sure that the TV is connected properly. Once that test has passed, you can begin testing with the full auto-login URL you created earlier.
Once the TV is loading the status screen correctly consider setting the URL as the home page. From then on you would only have to open the web browser to load the status screen. At this point, you shouldn't need anything else from this guide.
Setting up the PC
It is recommended that you use a 1920x1080 resolution for the display, and ensure the "scale" setting in your PC's display settings is configured to 100%. This setting is also known as "change the size of text, apps and other items", or "make text and other items larger or smaller".
Different resolution and scale settings can make the text too small to read from a distance or lead to formatting issues, but all screens and circumstances are different.
Dedicated PC
If you can assign a PC to just this task then simply connect the PC to the external monitor. Some Trusts are using cost effective low powered stick PCs for this purpose.
Multiple monitors
Consult with your IT department and have them set up the secondary monitor in "extend desktop" mode.
We've identified a few circumstances where it is not be possible to launch anything on a secondary monitor automatically if the secondary monitor is arranged to the left of the main monitor in Windows display settings. No matter what you do the window will open on the primary display. If you encounter this problem, consider re-arranging the monitor layout so the secondary monitor (the external display) is to the right of the primary display (the actual PC monitor), even if that does not make sense in terms of the actual physical layout. We appreciate this is odd. This issue has affected all screen launching methods we have tested with.
Creating a desktop shortcut file
Next you will download a desktop shortcut that with some slight manual modification will open a web browser in kiosk mode and direct it straight into the newly created view.
Starting point download for Chrome
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=1921,0 "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"
Download this shortcut example
Note: this download will not work without some reconfiguration. It is provided for your reference.
Starting point download for Edge
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=1921,0 "http://YourPTSServer/PTSWeb/?User=OUTDISP&Password=pharmacy&IgnoreWindowsUsername=True"
Download this shortcut example
Note: this download will not work without some reconfiguration. It is provided for your reference.
These examples will need to be modified to work with your system.
Modifying the example shortcut target
To reiterate, you will need to make changes to the provided examples and they will not work as-is.
Unzip the shortcut file first, and then right-click it and choose Properties. You will find the Target field in there. It is formatted like this:
"Path to web browser application" --kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen --incognito --inprivate --window-position=HorizontalOffset,VerticalOffset "PTS URL with login parameters"
Path to web browser application
e.g. "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe"
The physical path to the chosen web application executable. Include the quotes.
Kiosk switches for launching in full screen
--kiosk --edge-kiosk-type=fullscreen
Including --kiosk instructs the browser to load the web page in full screen. Microsoft Edge sometimes needs the additional switch to stop it opening in a new tab in an existing window.
Private browsing switches
--incognito --inprivate
Incognito is Chrome's name for private browsing and InPrivate is Edge's version, but including both is fine.
Private browsing is recommended as a simple way of preventing the display screen's PTS session from interfering with a pharmacist's 'normal' PTS session if used on the same PC.
Window position switch for launching on a secondary monitor
e.g. --window-position=1921,0
--window-position is the pixel offset from the top left corner of the primary display where the new window will appear. The default is 0,0.
For our purposes this can be used to open the page on a secondary monitor. This is done by specifying the horizontal offset to be one pixel greater than the horizontal resolution of the primary monitor. For example if the primary monitor is a 1920x1080 display, specify --window-position=1921,0 to open the page on the secondary monitor.
If you have a more elaborate monitor arrangement you should still be able to get the status screen to appear where you want it to by experimenting with both of the window-position values. Trial and error is likely to be the way forward.
Either set the value to 0,0 or omit the switch entirely to have the screen open on the main display.
PTS URL with login parameters
Enter the URL you created earlier. Include the quotes.
Testing the shortcut file
Double click the file to verify that it opens up in the way you want it too.
From now on you can now either use this shortcut to manually open the status screen, or continue on to the next section to get it to load automatically.
If kiosk mode prevents you from closing the page back down, either Alt+Tab or Alt+F4 to move away from it.
Getting Windows to load the shortcut automatically
Now that the shortcut is created you may want to configure Windows to load the shortcut automatically when the PC is turned on or logged in. This part of the process may require admin access to the PC. If IT need to get involved, explain the task first as they may have their own methods for getting things to load automatically.
That notwithstanding, the simplest normal way to get a file to boot automatically is to add it to the all users Startup folder in Windows. This directory is normally hidden but you can find it by running this command in an Explorer window:
C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\StartUp
Simply drag and drop the shortcut file into the directory, then reboot the PC. Now when you or someone else logs in to Windows, the status screen should load on the correct monitor automatically.
Allowing sound
Most modern web browsers deliberately block web pages from auto-playing sound when the user isn't interacting with the page as a safety measure. Unfortunately this conflicts with how these status screens are designed to be used.
Allow auto-play in Edge
Click on the three dots at the top right corner of Edge and open Settings. From the sidebar panel, click on the Cookies and Site Permission and open the Media Autoplay within Site Permissions. You can either allow autoplay for all sites (recommended) or allow auto-play on a per-site basis.
Allow auto-play in Chrome
Add this argument to the Chrome shortcut after the --kiosk argument:
--autoplay-policy=no-user-gesture-required
In some cases this is not sufficient if it conflicts with a pre-existing user policy. You should consult with your IT department about the problem, but in the event that you have full control of the PC, it's possible to modify the registry to override the policy.
Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Google\Chrome
You may have to create the "Google" and "Chrome" keys yourself. Once inside the Chrome 'folder', create a DWORD 32-Bit Value, call it "AutoplayAllowed", and set the value to 1 (true). You should now restart the PC.
Still no sound?
At this point you should consider whether the PC is outputting sound to the correct output device, and that the TV is not muted and things like that. It's not unusual for Windows to default to the wrong audio settings; this is because it is less common to use a secondary screen as the audio output device.
The display screens have built in YouTube connectivity for showing video messages to patients in accordance with the customisable Status Screen Messages. If the PTS server does not have outside internet connectivity, not only will this not work but the failed connection attempt can cause a noticeable impact to performance. This will happen whether the status screen message actually calls for a video or not; the YouTube API is embedded in the page.
The issue is often first noticed when the screen fails to call out ticket numbers, or moves between pages slowly, or just generally seems to be struggling.
To tell PTS not to attempt any remote connections, go to Setup > Application Settings, locate the "skip checking if PTS is online" setting (OFFLINE) and set it to Yes.
More performance tweaks can be found here.
Screen stops updating overnight
In common with all web applications, PTS, and your server/s, have various timeout settings configured to save on system resources when an inactive session is detected. If your display screen is ever left on overnight while the pharmacy is closed, it's likely that the session will timeout at some point and will no longer be updating, even in the morning when the pharmacy is open again.
It's not wise to increase the timeout interval to cover a full overnight period. For context a normal timeout is 30 minutes or so.
Furthermore, the PC, TV, or even the browser itself can have various power saving measures that can have the same effect. Identifying and remedying every possible cause can be impractical and can have other unintended effects. As such if you start to be affected by this issue we advise that the simplest solution is to turn off the PC or Smart TV overnight and turn it back on in the morning. Assuming that the shortcuts etc. have all been configured as outlined in this document, the display screen should then load correctly.
It's possible that IT could implement a task to have the PC reboot and log itself back in on a schedule (such as at opening time).