Review of activecampaign
Review of wpforms
Review of victoriassecret
Review of termsfeed
Perfect! I read the clauses just to get an understanding of the offers, and it is digestible. It gives a sense of transparency to website users where they understand the terms regulating it.It's worth the investment, but a lower Privacy Policy would be appreciated in the future.
Review of termsfeed
Review of teamviewer
Review of moz
Review of mailchimp
Review of springer
Review of groupon
Review of expedia
Review of dreamstime
Review of discordapp
Review of depop
They are running a scam, and I will never use Depop again! They have stolen from me and allowed a buyer to take my goods with clear intent to commit theft. I strongly demand that this platform be shut down. I am taking matters into my own hands to retrieve my stolen items. If you've had similar experiences with buyers reporting your items as counterfeit, to get a refund and keep the items make sure to keep their addresses when sending to use against them. Furthermore, report those buyers or their items to ensure they are shut down because Depop is refusing to refund me. I have lost two items to a buyer who clearly intended to scam me, and I am seriously considering recovering my property directly from their address. Enough is enough!
Review of xero
Really fantastic customer service experience- I had a problem logging into Xero, which the FAQs didn't cover, so I contact them via the support link. Within 3 minutes, Nathalie had contacted me and walked me clearly through all the support process, after which the problem was solved. She remained on the phone throughout, only signing off when the problem was solved.
Review of woot
As a Prime member, I've purchased plenty of items via Woot and received free shipping. As I write this in April 2022, however, Woot's discount prices are increasingly rare. Some nearly identical items are more expensive than on Amazon, often without accompanying reviews. Today, a whole page of "gardening" items was shockingly pricey -- items such as garden gnomes, rain-drip chains and bags of flower bulbs, the latter of which Home Depot offers for a cheaper cost. I was willing to endure the Woot monkey nonsense for potential discounts, but low prices are increasingly rare.
Review of live
Outlook used to be decent, but this latest update is an absolute disaster. First off, the constant demand to verify my identity using my old phone number—which I no longer have—makes the platform utterly useless. Who thought it was a good idea to lock users out of their accounts because they changed their phone number? It’s 2025, and they still haven’t figured out how to implement a simple, flexible account recovery process.But wait, it gets worse. The entire system is clunky and outdated. Navigating through the settings is like trying to solve a Rubik’s Cube blindfolded. There’s no clear guidance, no helpful prompts, and no way to bypass ridiculous barriers like their identity checks. The customer support is non-existent—good luck trying to reach anyone who can actually help. It’s almost like they designed the system to frustrate people on purpose.The email interface itself is a mess. Half the time, it feels like the app is lagging, glitching, or just straight-up refusing to load my messages. The search function barely works, so good luck finding anything in your inbox unless you’ve got hours to waste scrolling. And don’t get me started on the ads—they’re everywhere. It’s like they’re prioritizing shoving ads in my face over delivering a functional product.And who approved this new UI? It’s bloated, unintuitive, and unnecessarily complicated. Basic actions like composing an email or organizing folders now require extra clicks and a degree in software engineering to figure out. Instead of improving productivity, this update has made every single task more tedious.To top it all off, Outlook still lacks any meaningful integration with third-party tools. Compared to Gmail or other competitors, it’s lightyears behind. At this point, I feel like I’d be better off chiseling my emails into stone tablets and delivering them by carrier pigeon.In short, Outlook has gone from a semi-reliable email service to an infuriating, broken nightmare. If you value your time, sanity, or access to your emails, do yourself a favor and avoid it like the plague.
Review of kayak
Review of ancestry
While AncestryDNA offers a polished interface and a large user base, I feel that i have to express serious concerns about the limited accuracy and regional blindness of its ethnicity estimates — especially for individuals with deep, layered ancestry in the Mediterranean, Near East, and Asia Minor.Despite my well-documented family roots in areas such as Asia Minor, a specific island in Greece, and the broader Eastern Mediterranean, the results I received were overly generalized and failed to capture the complexity of my heritage. Rich and historically significant populations like Levantines, Iranians, Armenians, Sephardic,and North Africans were entirely absent or collapsed into vague labels like “Greece & Albania” or “Aegean.”In stark contrast, third-party tools such as GEDmatch — as well as ethnicity interpretation engines on other platforms — identified clear genetic signals from Lebanon, Iran, Armenia, the Caucasus, Italy/Sicily, Maghreb, and even trace elements from South America. These findings not only matched documented family history, but offered a multi-layered view that Ancestry failed to even approximate.Frankly, for a service of this scale and reach, such lack of resolution and regional sensitivity is not satisfied, to say the least. It risks erasing centuries of migration, diaspora, and cultural identity in favor of an oversimplified, Western-centric narrative.At this time, I cannot recommend AncestryDNA to individuals with Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, or Anatolian ancestry who are seeking serious genealogical insight.
Review of ancestry