Postby DanRoddy » November 27th, 2006 12:41 am
I have to say that I think there is a certain imbalance in the pricing structure: the site's best part is its listening material, and that is free; the PDFs are okay, if error strewn, and with the free soundfiles are pretty good value at only 8USD a month.
However, upgrading to premium (at three times that cost) offers access to a range of elements which, as has been mentioned previously, is often available on the web for free. I wouldn't mind paying for access to this in one place if they were well implemented, but really they aren't that slick.
For example, I can add kanji to my kanji bank, but having done so, what can I do with it? I can print it out and, er, that's it. I'm not even offered the opportunity to run a test of kanji in my own learning centre. Nevermind that the testing process is a little simplistic (I have found free websites that implement the testing procedure at least as effectively and commercial software that blows it out the water for less than the cost of a single month's premium subscription).
The JLPT test questions are amongst my favourite parts of the site, but there is no support material to back that up; not even so much as a translation available to help me fathom out where I went wrong. (That said, the fact that the test results are recorded is a great development - I first signed up just as they were introduced and the lack of recorded scores was one influencing factor on my not continuing my subscription.)
What is particularly galling is that, as a premium user, having stumped up considerably more money than a basic subscriber, I get nothing to show for it at the end. Premium content is all online while the basic content is solely downloadable. This means you have the peculiar scenario where Premo users pay lots for a short while, a Base user could, in theory, sign up once every six months, download all the PDFs they can, then spend ages working their way through them accessing the free audio files as necessary (actually folks, that's a bad idea - if we all did that JPod would simply cease to exist and that is BAAAD).
For all that, I LOVE JPod. I work in learning technology, designing corporate learning packages (you know, company induction and product training and so on), and I would kill to get the chance to cook up something that would impart just a fraction of the learning that JPod has the power to disseminate.
What's more, I get the sense that things are going to improve, so I've stumped up for a three month sub and hope to see enough between now and the end of my time to warrant doing it again.