Eat.ly is sort of like a Flickr for food—it allows you to keep a visual record of meals you’ve eaten, and then share your images with friends, family, or social networks. Users could also rate meals using our ‘healthiness scale’ of 1 to 100.
Foodspotting goes beyond just the sharing component and allows users to rate foods, find food they might enjoy by their location and more. As of August, its iPhone app had seen over 120,000 downloads and had facilitated the sharing of 100,000 different pieces of food.
Foodspotting, which offers a popular iPhone app, is on a roll. The startup hjust secured $750,000 in new funding and scored deals with both Zagat and The Travel Channel for partnerships.
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Authors: Leena Rao