How it works mockups
More social ritual. Less diagnostic dashboard.
A warmer Timeleft-adjacent direction for AlignEat: dinner first, safety quietly handled in the background.
Questions ready for the server if the kitchen needs checking.
Concept 01 / Social dinner confidence
Go to dinner. Let the menu work for everyone.
This is the most Timeleft-like route: the emotional promise is showing up to a real table, while AlignEat quietly removes the dietary friction before the night starts.
- 01Save your food profile once.
- 02Pick the dinner, group, or restaurant.
- 03Arrive knowing what works for you.
Concept 02 / Menu X-ray dossier
The menu does not show the risk. AlignEat does.
Show the restaurant menu as evidence: what the diner sees, what AlignEat traces, and the decision it gives before the order.
Concept 03 / Table compatibility
One scan for the whole table. No dietary roundtable.
Make group mode the hero. This direction feels human, social, and practical because the visual is built around actual people and conflicting needs.
Concept 04 / Waiter-ready output
It does not stop at analysis. It gives you the words.
For severe allergies and travel, the page can end the anxiety loop by showing the exact card, question, and translation the diner can hand to staff.
Is the halloumi toasted on the same surface as bread?
Je suis allergique aux arachides et aux fruits a coque.
Sea bass, steamed rice, lemon sauce on the side. No shared fryer.
Recommendation
Use the social dinner concept as the spine, then borrow the menu X-ray as proof.
If you want more Timeleft, the page should sell the feeling of arriving at a table where the food works. The menu X-ray still matters, but it becomes the mechanism underneath the social promise.