![]() On major websites they're all on even footing but once you start importing recipes from recipe/lifestyle blogs then Paprika starts showing its age. Web recipe importing - all three have easy recipe sharing extensions to import recipes but Mela/Crouton do a much much better job of it. ![]() ![]() Syncing recipes - Mela/Crouton use iCloud sync as opposed to a proprietary account/sync system. Not having to make it work across multiple platforms and generally being newer and seeing more ongoing development is a big advantage but I'll highlight two unique benefits that I've seen. However, if you're iOS/macOS only then I'd highly suggest you look at more recent alternatives and I'd specifically recommend Mela and Crouton. Paprika is great, I have had it for years (started with the prior version) and it was probably the first app I used to earnestly record recipes. Importing from websites is super easy on mobile devices so at least there is that but both versions can be a nice to have. It's similar situation to browsing on a phone vs a computer, consumption is awesome on a mobile device but once you start getting to repetitive data entry then a mouse/keyboard makes a big difference. As someone aiming to feel a bit fitter this year, I’ll definitely be paying attention here.The ideal use case for having both versions is that the desktop is easier to use if you anticipate that you'll do ongoing recipe maintenance (creating your own recipes, making edits, organizing, adding notes, etc.). Plus, we discover why it’s more powerful to make small, gentle resolutions when it comes to fitness (and probably lots of other things, too!), on page 76. If work is your focus right now, discover how owning up to your ambitions can help them come true (page 28) and learn how to reboot your career in seven steps (page 88). If you are l ooking for love this year, we’ve got ideas on how to move for ward with or without baggage from past relationships, on page 62. It might be that you feel this is a year you really want to look after yourself and your own inner happiness, in which case turn to our brilliant dossier on page 45, where we will hold your hand as you work out what happiness really looks like for you, and then help you plan how to get it. That’s why this issue we are unashamedly embracing this emotion and helping you to think about all the different areas of our lives and the ways that you can take control of them and influence them for the better. It doesn’t matter, though – whatever you call it, I think many of us will be planning to make a few changes right now: it seems to go hand in hand with the end of the festive season, that as we take down the decorations we think about spring cleaning the rest of our lives, too. Maybe it’s the terminology people resist: a ‘resolution’ is perhaps too reminiscent of something from the UN Security Council and not quite the right word for your good intentions to make a small change in your own life. Where do you stand on the great, annual New Year’s resolution debate? Do you belong to the one in seven of us who admit to making resolutions, or are you one of the other six who lie to the polling companies? Because, call me cynical, but I’m amazed if only 14 per cent of us will really be making a resolution to change something this new year, as the latest ‘research’ suggests.
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