Relevant offers
Digital Living
Singles who believe in love at first sight can turn to new apps that will match them with potential dates in time for Valentine's Day, but only if each person has expressed an interest.
With the new dating apps, users simply flip through photos of people in nearby locations and express their interest in dating someone. If there's a mutual attraction, the app connects them for a conversation. If not, their feelings remain anonymous.
"It limits the conversations to people you've actually expressed an interest in. So each of those conversations starts at a very deep level," said Sean Rad, co-founder and CEO of Los Angeles-based company Tinder, which developed the app of the same name.
Makers of the Tinder app, which is available worldwide for iPhone, said it has matched more than 10 million couples since it was launched in September.
The app pulls in member photos of people from Facebook, and then it's as simple as anonymously indicating interest in that person. If both people like each other, messages can be sent between the two users.
Rad said most users are between 18 and 30 years old.
Let's Date, which was released across the United States last week for the iPhone, is a similar app. But rather than simply focusing on the photo, the app provides the person's interests from Facebook for a broader view of the potential date.
"Our goal was to create an app that replicated the real world experience of going to a party or bar full of potentially eligible people," said Sean Suhl, founder of Let's Date.
"You're put into a crowd of people and if someone catches your eye and they catch your eye, then a conversation is struck up and then someone might ask the other person out on a date," he added.
The app resulted from a frustration with other dating apps, according to Suhl, who described them as "artificial and laborious".
"We're just presenting you the daters and you're just saying yes or no," he added.
Both apps require a login with Facebook, so people must use their real identity. Let's Date also stipulates that users must have been active on Facebook for a year, and have at least 50 friends before signing up.
Although the apps can set people up quickly, it still could take a while to find the right person.
"People are literally getting dates the same night, but you might want to give yourself enough time to find the right Valentine," Rad said.
Both companies plan to release Android apps.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Microsoft backtracks on Xbox One
LA to give every student an iPad
Dotcom 'in tears' after data deletion
Are your Apple iMessages secure?
Facebook may have saved thousands of lives
IBM Australia to cut 1500 jobs
Smartphone app links to home line
Drunk antics page 'just negative stereotyping'
Microsoft says it freed millions from botnet
Wellington in dark as storm slams capital
Day care owners guilty in Qatar mall fire case
Burglars impersonating police in Auckland
Car bursts into flames in Hamilton
All White McGlinchey to face Man United
Don but not forgotten: the late, great Gandolfini
New technologies create headaches for car owners
Show us your school ball style
Kanye West slammed for 'ignorant' lyrics
Crime victims: I lost my teeth and confidence
Kim Kardashian labour induced for safety
Panel shop chops BMW X5 SUV into a ute
Are you happy with the Facebook News Feed redesign?
