Electronic menu cards that will let customers order food without waiters has been introduced by some restaurants in California and New York.
![E-menus Let Customers Order Food Without Waiters, Play Games E-menus Let Customers Order Food Without Waiters, Play Games](https://www.medindia.net/afp/images/Argentina-gays-tourism-10229.jpg)
When you touch the screen, it shows you close-up pictures of things you might be interested in eating, and asks if you'd like to play a game. When it's time to leave, it splits the bill for you and your friends - equally, or by item - and automatically adds a 20 percent tip, CSMonitor.com reported.
The electronic menu - an innovation that some restaurateurs hope will soon become more ubiquitous than the drive thru (and easier to understand, too).
At some restaurants, it is a special device that lets customers order, pay, play, and even like their favorite local omelette on Facebook - all without having to resort to semaphore to flag down a waiter. At others, the menu is simply loaded onto an iPad or tablet provided at every table.
The e-menu at the Kinsale is a device called Presto and was developed by a company started by an MIT dropout who once had some trouble figuring out how to split a restaurant bill with friends.
Now the company, E la Carte, supplies its menus to about 300 restaurants across the United States - and is slowly making its way from California to the East Coast.
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In April, the first electronic menus started appearing at restaurants in New York City - kosher restaurants - because Bernard Samet, the businessman who is selling them is affiliated with an Israeli company that makes e-menus.
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According to Samet, digital menus encourage people to spend more by showing them appetizing photos and by suggesting other items that go well with their order.
Source-ANI