The site wants an E-mail address before showing me anything in my area. Then, after I provide that, I'm told the service isn't even available for my zip code. Now I feel like I've been tricked. Why not allow people to see sample sale items in a given zip code, and let users know if the site even serves their area before asking them to provide an E-mail address?
I am both encouraged and discouraged by this. I am building something sort of like it.<p>On one hand it validates the idea a bit and on the other someone beat me to the punch.<p>Good luck guys!
Direct link to AnyLeaf: <a href="http://www.anyleaf.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.anyleaf.com/</a><p>Doesn't reveal much for those who are not members. Might benefit from some "here's what it looks like" screenshots or did that test poorly?<p>Where does the data come from? Scraped from websites, provided by the stores, or scanned from physical catalogues?
Congratulations guys! I like the redesign. I check the site for deals every weekend before doing the weekly shopping and always find at least one good deal. (I am still looking forward to seeing the expansion to Whole foods :)<p>I am sure you already know this, but https for the passwords would be nice to see when you have a few min to look into it.
wow this is great!! congratz guys for the launch. I already spent a good amount of time on the site. Looks so perpetually useful, much more than things like Groupons which only work once in awhile.
Quick someone - find a way to do this with social deals sites. Filter out the daily spa deals and provide deals that match my interests from all the various groupon clones.
This makes me really sad. Food is one of the most important things you buy for your health. You should not go for cheap prices but for quality instead. How good can 0.99$ meat be? It will be full of hormons, antibiotics and other harmful things. It will be made in a way that harms environment.