But apart from that, you think the sites OK?
Exactly as per what ammack said in post 9. PLUS they also went out of their way to further hack users off by censoring their complaints on the FindMyPast forum, which they then denied doing, but which everyone who was following the forum posts, and there were many hundreds of them, did not believe.
They caused further fury by making no response to floods of customers complaints for over a week and then only initially doing so via facebook. ! Then they tried to tough it out and claim that everything was great and that there weren't any serious problems, until eventually the site nearly went into meltdown with customer complaints, and after several weeks FindMyPast was forced to accept reality and apologise for the mess they had created.
It was all marketing driven, they wanted to get into bed with ancestry dot com in order to increase their share of the U.S. market and in doing so, they tried to make every national version of FindMyPast look, and behave, like a clone of ancestry, which has always been a clunker of a site,but all they really achieved was to swap a superb site for an unmarketable pale wreck of what it had previously been.
It works and some of it works very well and much of it is still superior to ancestry but it's only a fraction as good as it used to be and for new users it will take quite a bit of practice and fiddling to get the hang of it and to be able to get the best use from it.
It's certainly worth £1 although it's no longer as intuitive to use as it used to be, and some of the former features that were particularly useful were never restored, and the formerly superb customer service and prompt feedback seems to have vanished, and it's no longer even worse and more nebulous than ancestry, and FindMyPast did manage to achieve the seemingly impossible in April 2014 and actually did manage for a time to make it even worse than ancestry.
Many of the most useful and flexible features have vanished, and quite a few of them have been replaced with features that are bizarre in their inflexible nebulosity.
Currently ancestry seems to be preparing to attempt the same feat, by gleefully preparing to replace the already very badly implemented and run, and very technical fault prone ancestry site, with some creation that they're calling new ancestry, which is already in place and which users at least have the option of trying and at present they can still revert to the old version, but some records are only available via the new version, and most of the users who have tried the new version, seem to detest it, but ancestry, which constantly asks for feedback from the users about the new version, is of course nevertheless telling the users that it's really great, is a big improvement, and that they will really love it, and that anyway, they will soon have no choice, because soon the new version will be the only one available.