Silicon Valley’s ‘SeeFood’ App Is Now Real Thanks To Pinterest

Photo: Marco Verch (Wikimedia Commons)

A recent episode of HBO’s comedy Silicon Valley featured the ideation of an app called SeeFood. The app was pitched as a “Shazam for food” concept that allowed you to see recipes and dietary information when you pointed your smartphone camera at a dish. On the actual TV show, they were only able to create tech that told you whether an object was a hot dog or not.

Pinterest, however, has created a real-life version of SeeFood within their own app. While The Verge confirmed that Pinterest’s release of this feature around the same time as the Silicon Valley episode was merely “coincidental,” the real tech behaves extremely similar to what was conceived on the show.

Pinterest’s new feature is an upgrade to the app’s visual search tool, Pinterest Lens, that is being marketed as “real-time dish recognition” that highlights specific key words relating to what the dish your smartphone camera is focused on is, and can even look up recipe recommendations from within its own app.

What’s really great about it is that you can train your smartphone’s camera onto any dish or food and quickly get multiple new recipe ideas to try out. Sounds like a pretty cool concept to me.

More content

CultureProducts
Pressed Juicery Honors Black History Month With Limited Edition Artist Series
Pressed Juicery is honoring the creativity of Black culture for Black History Month. The cold-pressed juice and snacks brand commissioned three Black artists to transform its…
,
CultureEating Out
Netflix Just Opened A Restaurant In Las Vegas—Here’s What to Expect
Netflix is inviting your taste buds into its world of hit shows. Now open at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, NETFLIX BITES…
,
CultureEating Out
Chili’s Makes It Own Lifetime Holiday Movie For National Margarita Day
Some might question whether days like National Margarita Day—coming up on Saturday, February 22—are real holidays. But Chili’s Grill & Bar is out to prove…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox