{"id":6485,"date":"2010-02-23T13:45:31","date_gmt":"2010-02-23T20:45:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=6485"},"modified":"2010-02-23T13:49:06","modified_gmt":"2010-02-23T20:49:06","slug":"mobile-webapp-version-of-iphone-hit-urbanspoon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/6485\/","title":{"rendered":"Urbanspoon – Mobile Webapp Version Of An iPhone App Hit"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Urbanspoon<\/a> is one of the success stories of the iPhone appstore phenomenon. The self-funded three man start-up began as a web based, crowd sourced guide to dinning out in\u00a0 major metropolitan areas in the US and Canada.\u00a0 Urbanspoon\u00a0 launched a location aware iPhone app shortly after Apple opened the platform to third party developers in 2008. The app quickly became one of the 10 most downloaded apps on iTunes. Then Urbanspoon really hit it big after Apple featured it in a TV commercial. In a nice exit for the founders,\u00a0 Urbanspoon was acquired last year by IAC<\/a> for an unknown price that is generally believed to be several million dollars.<\/p>\n Lately, Urbanspoon has been broadening their potential user base beyond Apple with the launch of BlackBerry and Android apps and a mobile web version.\u00a0 The mobile site is at urbanspoon.com\/m<\/a>. It has the look and feel of an iPhone web app, but page sizes under 100 KB and no JavaScript dependencies mean it will work well with the majority of mobile browsers.<\/p>\n After picking a city, the site lets you search for a restaurant by name or keywords or browse by neighborhood and\/or cuisine. Listings feature a percentage ranking based on the number of “Like” votes by users and generally include address, with link to a Google mobile map, phone number, approximate price range, critic reviews from IAC owned CitySearch, blogs and local newspaper critics plus user reviews. Mobile usability could be better, though. Phone numbers are not click to call and their is no information on what days and hours each establishment is open.<\/p>\n Urbanspoon’s chief rival is Yelp<\/a> (Yelp mobile review<\/a>). Yelp seems to have slightly more restaurant listings and many more user reviews. But I think Urbanspoon’s inclusion of critic reviews, which I tend to trust more than user’s, makes the two services approximately equal in usefulness for finding a good place to eat. Yelp wins big on usability though by providing both click to call numbers and open hours listings.<\/p>\n Filed in:<\/em> Wap Review Directory – Search\/Local\/City and Campus Guides<\/a><\/p>\n Ratings:<\/em> Content Usability <\/span><\/p>\n Ready.mobi Score: <\/em>3 “Fair”<\/a><\/p>\n Mobile Link:<\/em> www.urbanspoon.com\/m\/<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Urbanspoon is one of the success stories of the iPhone appstore phenomenon. The self-funded three man start-up began as a web based, crowd sourced guide to dinning out in\u00a0 major metropolitan areas in the US and Canada.\u00a0 Urbanspoon\u00a0 launched a location aware iPhone app shortly after Apple opened the platform to third party developers in 2008. The app quickly became one of the 10 most downloaded apps on iTunes. Then Urbanspoon really hit it big after Apple featured it in … Continue reading