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May 22, 2008 10:38 AM PDT

Order food on your phone with CityMint

by Josh Lowensohn

Not in New York, but still excited by our write-up of Web food-ordering service Wakozi last week and the prospect of ordering snacks from your browser? Check out CityMint, a free service that links you up with the menus and ordering information for local food places. The service's claim to fame is its iPhone-optimized Web app, but users get a much richer experience on their regular desktop browsers.

Order food on your iPhone or other mobile device with CityMint.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Like Wakozi, CityMint lets you browse the menus and inventory selections of local places and add various items to a single order. It'll tell you which places deliver, what the minimum bill is for delivery, and let you charge it right from your phone. When you sign up, you can set up a credit card to be linked to your account. CityMint will then automatically do the transaction for you, as well as giving you a confirmation via e-mail with your estimated delivery time, what you ordered, and a receipt.

One thing CityMint is missing (for the time being) is information on the ever-changing specials at your local eateries. For example, the curry place right around the corner from CNET's San Francisco offices has $6 lunch combos that cost a third of the regular menu counterparts. They change on a weekly basis, and weren't featured on the list of available items on the restaurant's CityMint menu. At the same time, I found a nebulous "pizza special" in another local place, which managed to not tell me what actually came with it. Until that gets fine-tuned, there's a section called "delectable deals," which has some specials and coupons at participating retailers. Ideally, I'd like to see this section get tied in more closely in each place's menu pages.

For power users, the service lets you bookmark items you order frequently to save you some time. I know a few folks who go to the same two or three places every week and get the same thing. This would easily save them a half-hour or more each week just in wait time. There's also a system called Mint Codes that lets you create a bundle of your favorite items and order them anytime via short code SMS. You simply send the code word you set up, and it will order it for you, bill it to your card, and send the food on its way. Awesome.

CityMint joins a small group of other online food delivery services. There's Delivery.com, the aforementioned Wakozi, and GopherNow, which I checked out back in July of last year. Also worth mentioning is the grandfather of them all, Kozmo, which went under back in 2001.

Josh Lowensohn is an associate editor for Webware.com, CNET's blog about cool and otherwise useful Web applications and services. If you've found a site you'd like profiled, shoot him an e-mail. E-mail Josh.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by tzlfpmnf May 30, 2008 3:18 PM PDT
CityMint is actually not the first company to use the iPhone Web Browser app to order food mobile. Another Bay Area company called GetQuick announced this at the tail end of last year.
http://venturebeat.com/2007/12/13/getquik-raises-200000-seed-round-for-fast-ordering/
I'm still waiting for one of these companies to incorporate a GPS feature since most phones have them that will tell me where my local Pizza My Heart is.
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