Posts Tagged ‘lastminute.com’

Preview: Lastminute Labs ‘Nru’ Andoid App

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

News just in from the clever-types at Lastminute Labs (the team behind FoneFood, which we rather like) – they’ve also been trying out development on the Android platform and have released this video preview of their forthcoming application ‘Nru’ (pronounced ‘near you’).

Building on the search feature of FoneFood this application takes advantage of the magnetometer (compass to you and me) and GPS built into the G1 to locate entertainment venues, restaurants, landmarks and other stuff on a radar-like interface.  At last!  A way to find the nearest Pizza Express wherever you are without relying on Ewan’s legendary instinct.

We’re going to try it out as soon as we can.

Check it out:

Lastminute’s FoneFood gets location-aware

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Lastminute.com’s FoneFood application I blogged last week has got location-aware today courtesy of Google’s new Mobile Gears geolocation API.  See here for more details.

Congratulations to Marko and the team for snagging such an impressive partner in Google and getting the Lab’s first big mobile project as one of their two launch apps!

Here’s the Google video announcing the new API:

Lastminute.com Labs launches FoneFood

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Lastminute.com’s Labs team have today announced the launch of their first mobile application FoneFood – an impressive European-wide multi-lingual restaurant table reservation service.  The best apps explain themselves so…

FoneFood 1FoneFood 2FoneFood 3

Awesomely simple the application takes your location and food preference, displays a list and Google map of options that are bookable.  Users can then book and receive an SMS confirmation direct from the handset – no credit card required (genius!).  As it’s connected to the same system that provides online bookings through Lastminute’s regular website it also shows special offers that are available (as above).  It’s brilliantly effective and backed up by their impressive catalogue of around 6000 restaurants Europe-wide (with more being added) the value and ease are immediately appealing.  Users in their home town can discover new restaurants and take advantage of the special offers, users away from home can book in their native language – no problematic phone calls or help from the hotel reception required.  Being Europe-wide it also ensures users see the same service wherever they are rather than needing to negotiate specific booking processes for each country.

To celebrate the launch the team behind it have created this video which demonstrates the concept (and a lady dressed as a phone…).

[Hmmm... maybe that's an option for Whatley in the next podcast...]

However, this isn’t just the launch of a new service for the Labs team.  Speaking to Marko Balabanovic, head of innovation at Lastminute Labs, he explained that they see this effort as research rather than just the launch of a new service.  FoneFood, he told me, was first in a series of public experiments to test the market and the mobile technology.  Their task is to seek out new areas to engage with customers, not to provide mobile versions of their existing services – they’d picked restaurant booking as a free, but useful service to start things off.  The applications and services they are building may not always have much to do with travel and bookings and they didn’t expect all of it to become successful, but that learning would be crucial to developing Lastminute.com and the relationship with its customers. It would also, he hoped, highlight Lastminute wasn’t stuck in the current market’s mind-set.

Chatting to the team that Marko has built up there’s a real enthusiasm for mobile technology and an air of excitement about being given the opportunity to experiment.  Whilst there I played with some games they had developed that utilised the accelerometer in the Nokia N95… Location-based services were also on the agenda, with native applications for platforms such as Symbian’s S60 and the iPhone under consideration to access the device’s more advanced features.  FoneFood is a useful service, but it’s much more a statement of intent from Lastminute Labs.

My special report interview with Marko is available below and in the audio podcast feed:

[audio: 018_Special_Report_(Marko_Balabanovic_of_Lastminute_com_Labs).mp3]


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