Anti-Hunger App Unsung Partners with Arcade City’s 30,000 Users
Unsung founder Jason King has revealed a partnership with the new Austin-based ride-sharing organization Arcade City during the Crypto Show last night. The two groups will work together with the help of Arcade City’s 30,000 users to lay out the groundwork for Unsung’s application. Unsung & Arcade City Unite to #HackHunger. The Bitcoin community is a....
Related News
Unsung.org and Austin-based Arcade City are making a difference feeding people in need within the Texas capital. So far the two teams have delivered 1,000 meals throughout the city as the ambitious project continues hacking away at hunger. 1,000 Meals Delivered in Austin. Unsung.org is an application that feeds the hungry by delivering unwanted food from....
Food sharing app Unsung has partnered with decentralized ridesharing service Arcade City to feed the homeless in the city of Austin. Unsung is an app designed to solve hunger through a liaison between restaurants, the needy, and volunteers. A restaurant uses the app to indicate that excess food is available for donation. A homeless or otherwise needy person can then be located by dropping a pin through the app, and a volunteer will take the food to the needy. Volunteers may be tipped in Bitcoin. The partnership would use Arcade City drivers to deliver the food. The announcement came via a....
Unsung is a new app coming to the public shortly that leverages the sharing economy and Bitcoin to “hack hunger.” Americans battling hunger in the U.S. is a significant problem with 49 million people going without food daily. The Unsung platform offers a different approach by engaging in social media and building a community that’s rewarded for its....
Unsung.org has just announced the release of its iOS app on October 21. Jason King, founder of the “hunger hacking” platform, says he’s thrilled to bring the app to the masses. Unsung Aims To Hack More Hunger. 49 million people across the U.S. go without food on a daily basis. However the U.S. Department of Agriculture says the country wastes nearly 40....
Arcade City’s leadership has rebranded into a separate entity, something its founder is not happy with. In an effort to bypass a controversial past, Arcade City, the Ethereum-based ride sharing project that generated great buzz in the Blockchain world before hitting delays late last year, has split. The council and several key community members have rebranded and formed a new entity named Swarm City, which will have the use of the funds raised in the ARC token sale. However, Christopher David, Arcade City’s founder and sole owner of Arcade City, Inc., is not happy with the rebranding and....