It finally happened. You cornered the Pentagon’s Chief of Psy-Ops at a cocktail
party, sold him on your plan to relentlessly bombard the Taliban with Justin Bieber songs, and even came
away with a trophy: his business card.
But then, your night got the better of you. And somewhere between the after-after-party and waking up in the visitors’ dugout at Nationals Park, you lost the card.
It won’t happen again, because along comes CardMunch, a new mobile app devoted to making sure you never lose another card, available now.
It’s basically a virtual rolodex, populated by a staff of actual human beings (not robots), who will know that the future client you just met is not named “K Street.”
So the next time you get a card, you’ll point your phone’s camera at it. The image will be sent off to CardMunch’s HQ in Northern California, where a minimum of three staffers will painstakingly review it and upload it to your phone’s contacts, all for the princely sum of... a quarter.
And should you dunk your phone into the Potomac, not to worry: the app automatically backs up and syncs your contacts.
You wouldn’t want to recreate Barack’s card from memory.
But then, your night got the better of you. And somewhere between the after-after-party and waking up in the visitors’ dugout at Nationals Park, you lost the card.
It won’t happen again, because along comes CardMunch, a new mobile app devoted to making sure you never lose another card, available now.
It’s basically a virtual rolodex, populated by a staff of actual human beings (not robots), who will know that the future client you just met is not named “K Street.”
So the next time you get a card, you’ll point your phone’s camera at it. The image will be sent off to CardMunch’s HQ in Northern California, where a minimum of three staffers will painstakingly review it and upload it to your phone’s contacts, all for the princely sum of... a quarter.
And should you dunk your phone into the Potomac, not to worry: the app automatically backs up and syncs your contacts.
You wouldn’t want to recreate Barack’s card from memory.