The message boards on the WW website are free to use--although you have to register, you don't have to pay for that feature. You might try asking opinions on some of the forums over there--many of the people who post there are online members.
My impression from reading there is that the online membership offers some useful features if you were contemplating doing the program on your own anyway. I think the online members miss out on some of the explanations of the program that are in the written material, as evidenced by the frequency of questions posted to the board that are pretty simple to answer if you have the program booklets!
For your fee, you'll get access to, among other things:
- An online database of foods to give you points values, which I gather is pretty comprehensive. OTOH, I've been doing the program without it for years now and almost always can come up with points for things from SOMEWHERE--standard reference books, Dotti's site (
www.DWLZ.com), online nutrition references (
www.calorieking.com, for example).
- An online points calculator, which I gather is sorta buggy (if you tell it you ate enough broccoli, it charges you points, because it just looks at the cal/fat/fiber). You have a slider, so it's not a necessity for you. And with the formula (posted by LM below, or a simpler, roughly mathematically equivalent version I can give you), you can work out points on your own.
- An online points booster for activity points which does NOT impress me --it seems to give very odd, inconsistent AP's to things and I think it's confusing, misleading, and counterproductive to eat more points because you vacuumed the house. Just my opinion here.
- A recipe builder that works out points for your recipes. Also has a reputation for being buggy. You can use various programs such as Mastercook for this.
- An archive of recipes not available to non-paying customers. Whether this is worth it to you or not depends on whether you are much of a recipe-hound. I'm not.
- An online journal, which tracks your points and your bank balance and so on, which strikes me as an advantage over paper journaling only if the novelty of doing it on the computer appeals to you. Otherwise, I've seen enough stories of the online journal "not letting" people do things that are perfectly within program guidelines to think it's just a pain in the neck.
So, have I sold you? Actually, I think it might be of some use, depending on what you like.