No need to eat that plain dry toast anymore,Watch Princess Cum Vol. 14 Online Mark.
Everyone's favorite social network launched its food delivery function across the U.S. on Friday. It is called "Order Food."
In a blog post, Alex Himel, Facebook's vice president of local, makes ordering food on Seamless sound like a byzantine adventure.
"Ordering food for takeout or delivery is supposed to be simple. That’s the point. But somehow it’s gotten complicated. First you need to decide what to eat, then you have to sift through a bunch of options and services," he wrote.
To fix this...uh...issue?... Facebook is introducing its own way to order food that seems exactly like Seamless and every other online food delivery service.
It will be great for people who look for food on Facebook, Himel wrote.
"Today, we’re taking the time out of finding what you want to eat by officially launching the ability to order food for pick-up or delivery, directly on Facebook. People already go to Facebook to figure out what to eat by reading about nearby restaurants, and seeing what their friends say about them. So, we’re making it even easier," he wrote.
The video below highlights how it works:
The upside of Facebook is that it combines a variety of services into its "Order Food" function, which could be legitimately helpful. It pulls in a variety of existing services, local restaurants, and large chains, "so you don’t have to search through multiple places to find what you’re looking for."
But if you're not sure what you want to eat, you're still on your own
"People will be able to browse restaurants near them that take orders via Delivery.com, DoorDash, ChowNow, Zuppler, EatStreet, Slice, and Olo, as well as directly from restaurants including Papa John’s, Wingstop, Panera, Jack in the Box, TGI Friday’s, Denny’s, El Pollo Loco, Chipotle, Five Guys and Jimmy John’s," Himel wrote.
Facebook had been testing its food delivery option in limited areas. On Friday, it's available across the U.S. on desktop as well as iOS and Android.
At least on desktop, "Order Food" wasn't exactly easy to find.
Skepticism aside, Facebook is an insanely big platform, and even a hard-to-find and rarely-used function like this can shift an entire industry. Facebook also joins Uber and Amazon as massive platforms that are looking to get more involved in food delivery.
Topics Facebook
What the inside of Google's Pixel 2 XL looks like, including those weird squeeze sensors'Thor: Raganarok': Movie reviewHow to throw an awesome divorce party, 'You're the Worst' stylePeople aren't cool with the LAPD getting dronesBoss of Facebook's secretive hardware lab out after 18 monthsMagic Leap raised another $500 million, even though its product is MIAMarriott's Slack extension proves booking corporate travel software doesn't have to suck'Thor: Raganarok': Movie reviewAmazon Studios head Roy Price resigns amid sexual harassment accusation'Thor: Ragnarok' review roundupCNN plans to fly drones over crowds to capture news from aboveCanadian band The Tragically Hip's Gord Downie dead at 53The next big Star Wars game is in troublePhotographer creates a 'dudeoir' photoshoot to perfectly capture the essence of autumnCalifornia fires spare Charles Schulz's iconic skating rinkElon Musk's Boring Company hat is on sale nowEminem's anti'Tetris' is playable in certain Russian trucks, and for a very specific reasonTrump plummets down Forbes 400 list of richest AmericansIf you own a Ford pickup truck, it probably just got recalled The Ultimate 44 Used Graphics Card Pricing & Benchmark Guide Chekhov On: Collection John H. Johnson and the Black Magazine by Dick Gregory The Ontology of Circus Peanuts by Jane Stern Looking Back on Sam Shepard’s Dynamic Women Life’s Dull: A Letter from Philip Larkin to Kingsley Amis What Our Writers Are Reading This Summer Little Red and Big Bad Death’s Plus The Enduring, Gloriously Déclassé Style of Barbara Windsor The Sneaky Brilliance of Geoff Dyer’s “Into the Zone” What (Else) Our Writers Are Reading This Summer Staff Picks: Paul Yoon, W. S. Merwin, Edwidge Danticat Harry: A Ghost Story The Day After 4' 33": On Listening to the Silence Little Red and Big Bad, Part 6 How the Unflappable Fred Astaire Survived the Fifties A Party in the Archive (Container Lovers Only) At Eisenberg’s Sandwich Shop, 22nd & 5th Ave
2.9599s , 10137.40625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Princess Cum Vol. 14 Online】,Miracle Information Network