• skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    17
    ·
    10 hours ago

    The modern them actually has an app that lets you build out recipes and/or scan barcodes to track what you eat, they use a distilled version of nutrition called “points” and you’re allocated Y points a day to try stay in your food budget.

    I think their older system was also points based just not software.

    The app has training content and some kind of social community (that people say is quite terrible apparently because of the other users).

    It isn’t a bad concept, and helps one understand that a slice of pizza is insanely unhealthy if one didn’t already know that.

    Where it falls apart is their skeezy subscription model. Best time to sign up is around New Years, if you do bulk pricing you get a discount for the year, if you sign up partly through the year, that discount only lasts 10, 8, 7 months, however many are left. If you want to get a better rate, even their customer service says to just cancel and then sign back up after you’re canceled. If they had honest flat-rate pricing and curated their social space/education material better, they’d likely have had something to offer…Instead, like most health tracking/exercise/apps that cost money, it’s difficult to manage, expensive, and abrasive to cancel.

    Like so many businesses that went “app” - they didn’t embrace a usable and sustainable model that fit on a digital platform, and instead basically phoned it in.