It says that facebook is to "see your friends' activity". It's probably just a way to promote the application via facebook, as there's no real benefit.
There's no price, it's to show the movies currently showing in cinemas, and the hours at the bottom.
The layout is nice but my browser seems to struggle a bit.
The Facebook integration is deeper than only publishing to newsfeeds: it reads and writes to the Open Graph which allow data mining for movies recommendations.
Agree, but the viewer could check a movie trailer, like it, and straight away book it through your website. And you could do geolocalisation stuff to find the optimal cinema for him or her as well.
For non-french, Cinemur seems to be a "modern" alternative to the old and messy allocine.fr, the french goto site for finding movies and booking seats. I don't see a way to do that, booking tickets. Is it planned?
@mikado & others: I'm curious how cinemur got started, especially investing-wise. I see it has a 963 808 € capital, and yet the websites seems to have appeared out of nowhere.
I thought Allociné was in pretty good standing with cinemas, film distributors, etc. How did you pull that one off?
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What is the price and why do you have to have Facebook?
There's no price, it's to show the movies currently showing in cinemas, and the hours at the bottom.
The layout is nice but my browser seems to struggle a bit.
My browser struggles to scroll the wall of posters, but other than that, it could be very nice.
Beau design en tout cas.
In the "séances" view, if I choose my city, then change the day to mardi, it goes back to Paris.
Also with the "Aujourd'hui à la TV" bezel, there seems to be a button that adds the broadcaster and hour. Unfortunately, it is invisible.
(iceweasel 10.0 on Debian unstable)
I thought Allociné was in pretty good standing with cinemas, film distributors, etc. How did you pull that one off?
Anyway, good job!