The convenience of being able to glance through articles and links to reports should render the paper version almost redundant. However, the premise is reliant on a well tested and reliable system. This is where the whole house of cards collapses. To take one example, today I was reading the 7 in 7 supplement. The broadband review provides a link to the table of Best Buys.
However, pressing the link takes me to a page which asks me, for the umpteenth time, to input my membership and password details. This has happened so often that the idea of a seamless experience is beyond a joke. Until this is sorted out I shall stick to using the good old fashioned paper edition. The app used to work well on my iPhone and iPad. The magazine was a number of articles and each article could be read taking up most of screen and scrolling down through article.
The new app is more like a magazine which is navigated page by page but I am not interested in which page I am reading. I want to read an article in its entirety without needing to worry about page I am reading. You can get something like old app by touching a button at bottom right but this has to be done on every page.
Also when downloading a magazine it has hung on me. To turn a good app into a poor app is very poor for a consumer organisation. The developer, Which? The following data may be used to track you across apps and websites owned by other companies:. The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:. Latest Conversations. What to expect at the Which? Sugar Awareness Week: what actions can we all take? Support our campaigns Together we can make consumers more powerful. Take action now.
Have you overpaid for your phone? Join Which? Already a member? Log in. Keeping your energy prices in check. Failing energy companies: latest updates 8 Nov Energy price rises: what you can do now 14 Oct Its aim, then as now, is to provide impartial, independent reviews and testing of consumer products. Since it was first published Which?
We have a complete set of Which? The first issue is dog-eared, monochrome and only has 32 pages. It contains reports about electric kettles, sunglasses, and no-iron cottons. The current issue April is larger, glossier and in full colour and has reports on vacuum cleaners, broadband, and wireless speakers.
Issues from the s, when the throwaway society was at its height, contain reports on paper knickers August and paper dresses August May also saw the first report on TV sets. There were issues over humming and buzzing noises, and problems with interference and the largest screen available was only a mere 21 inches.
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