Apps for food products
nome gruppo: giambopambo
Lavoro fatto da: Limone Jacopo, Sansone Giuseppe, Khudiakov Arseni
Yuka
Yuka is an app that helps people choose healthier food and cosmetic products. To use it, you simply scan the product’s barcode with your phone and the app immediately shows information about its quality. Yuka gives each product a score from 0 to 100 and uses colors to show the quality level: green if the product is very good, yellow if it is good, orange if it is average, and red if it is poor. The evaluation is mainly based on nutritional quality and the presence of additives. If a product receives a low score, the app also suggests healthier alternatives. In this way, it helps consumers shop more consciously and pay more attention to what they eat.
Open Food Facts
Open Food Facts is a "Wikipedia" for food. It's a completely free and independent app, created by users worldwide.
It scans barcodes and honestly breaks down the product, from its actual ingredients and calories to its chemical content and environmental footprint. The key feature is that there are no brand advertisements —only the bare facts that help you understand what's actually in the package and whether it's worth buying.
Fig
Fig (Food Is Good) is the essential companion for anyone with allergies or following specific diets (such as gluten-free or lactose-free). After setting up your personalized profile, the app scans products and instantly indicates whether a food is safe for your needs. It’s the perfect tool for stress-free shopping, eliminating the need to read every single line on the labels.
Conclusion
The apps we explored are not just scanning tools, but real assistants for a healthier life. Thanks to data transparency, today we can shop more critically and consciously.
Apps for food products
Jacopo Limone
Created on March 10, 2026
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Transcript
Apps for food products
nome gruppo: giambopambo
Lavoro fatto da: Limone Jacopo, Sansone Giuseppe, Khudiakov Arseni
Yuka
Yuka is an app that helps people choose healthier food and cosmetic products. To use it, you simply scan the product’s barcode with your phone and the app immediately shows information about its quality. Yuka gives each product a score from 0 to 100 and uses colors to show the quality level: green if the product is very good, yellow if it is good, orange if it is average, and red if it is poor. The evaluation is mainly based on nutritional quality and the presence of additives. If a product receives a low score, the app also suggests healthier alternatives. In this way, it helps consumers shop more consciously and pay more attention to what they eat.
Open Food Facts
Open Food Facts is a "Wikipedia" for food. It's a completely free and independent app, created by users worldwide. It scans barcodes and honestly breaks down the product, from its actual ingredients and calories to its chemical content and environmental footprint. The key feature is that there are no brand advertisements —only the bare facts that help you understand what's actually in the package and whether it's worth buying.
Fig
Fig (Food Is Good) is the essential companion for anyone with allergies or following specific diets (such as gluten-free or lactose-free). After setting up your personalized profile, the app scans products and instantly indicates whether a food is safe for your needs. It’s the perfect tool for stress-free shopping, eliminating the need to read every single line on the labels.
Conclusion
The apps we explored are not just scanning tools, but real assistants for a healthier life. Thanks to data transparency, today we can shop more critically and consciously.