Hmmn...
My strange hatred of "new glossika" continues. I think that the old mp3's and pdf's model was useful. I guess it was too vulnerable to piracy.
I have discovered something which is quite similar to old glossika. Buy one of the new Assimil texts with the CDs with the vast number of one sentence mp3 files which are divided into lessons in directories. You still have to uses the book to learn the meanings of the sentences, but once you know know the meanings you can drill for fluency by putting the sets of files into playlists and hit shuffle. This leads you to drill the sentences in scrambled order, avoiding the old patterns that limit the effectiveness of shadowing, and which give you the multiple repetitions that make many of the more effective high beginner/low intermediate methods work.
Assimil, bought legally, is expensive too, but compared to the new glossika price model, it's inexpensive. Once you buy it you own it.
I guess new glossika is useful for some people, but I can't stand the whole superior, guru/nanny attitude of the founder. I like to roll my own. Sometimes it falls apart, but rolling it is half the fun
I hope they make the old courses available somewhere sometime.