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Product: Cell Phone: Messaging: Application
Menu Advisor   (+5)  [vote for, against]
The Living Menu

You may have chosen the restaurant based on a trip advisor or yelp recommendation.

But for up to the minute useful recommendations, point your phone's camera at the menu and run the Menu Advisor, which will show you curated (from social media and direct in-app interaction) recommendations, thumbs up, and comments about the specific dishes you are looking to order.
-- theircompetitor, Mar 17 2018

This is a great idea, but it would need a lot of input from consumers.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Mar 17 2018


I only believe recommendations from friends. Everything else can be generated by bots that imitate non-existent people.
-- xenzag, Mar 17 2018


// I only believe recommendations from friends. //

Impossible. Everyone here knows you haven't got any friends.

// Everything else can be generated by bots that imitate non-existent people. //

Shhh, you'll put [IT] into an infinite loop again.
-- 8th of 7, Mar 17 2018


//Beyond that, food is food, it all tastes the same// You are a blind man standing before a rainbow. Except of course I mean tasteless rather than blind, and not a rainbow but some really delicious food.

Which raises an issue I've always wondered about (independently of considering [IT]). There is definitely a large percentage of people - mostly over the age of 50 but not exclusively so - who just don't get food. What I mean is, they don't seem to get any enjoyment, surprise, or laughter out of flavours. Their highest form of praise is "that was nice and tender" - even if it was a piece of boiled chicken that tastes like damp blotting paper. It's as if they have no sense of taste, or have somehow learned that it's rude to pay attention to flavours. But flavours are so unavoidable that I don't see how they can be like that. It's genuinely strange.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Mar 17 2018


Curry. That's the stuff. You can't ignore a good curry.

You can tell it's good if your earwax melts and dribbles down the sides of your head. Blurred vision, difficulty breathing, and short-term memory loss are encouraging signs that it is a "good" curry. Muscle tremor and nosebleeds mean it's the genuine article.

Curry. You know you want it.
-- 8th of 7, Mar 17 2018


If you don't like that chicken, [MB], I'll have it for lunch tomorrow.
-- pertinax, Mar 17 2018


I like this. I think it tasted great. Good one, comrade.
-- blissmiss, Mar 17 2018


//Curry. You know you want it.// Come back Dr. Curry. The halfbakery needs you.
-- xenzag, Mar 18 2018


//Blurred vision, difficulty breathing, and short-term memory loss are encouraging signs that it is a "good" curry.//

I knew there was something wrong with the official story that the Russians were responsible...
-- Wrongfellow, Mar 18 2018


Who's been adulterating the methanol with capsaicin again?
-- pertinax, Mar 18 2018


This would be great for the restaurant as well. If they're serving excellent food but the cake is always just a little dry this will point them to that area that needs improvement.
-- Voice, Mar 18 2018


{not noticing Leon}

... lime, yes, butter, coriander, yes, but also ginger, garlic, fresh chilli in moderation ...

Nicely chilled beer may also help.
-- pertinax, Mar 19 2018



random, halfbakery