I don't mind entering, and it gives me a chance to check out the design.
I didn't get a chance to see the old site, but the new site is very clean and easy to digest. I'm fond of the way data is laid out, and especially fond of how little data is presented on the main page. Too many sites are a complete cluttered mess of ads on the main page.
I do think the person who designed it went a little overboard with dynamic content: being able to change the font type is a bit goofy and that feature doesn't seem to deserve the top row. I guess you could say the same for the text size and background color, but both have their hypothetical uses: text size is useful for people who don't know how to adjust it in their own browser (though greying out the text size options when they can no longer be used would be useful; there are only three options!) and the background color change is typically useful for decreasing the overall brightness of a page. That kind of feature is usually most functional when it inverts the entire page (for those fond of old-school terminal design) but I don't know if that kind of thing has any place on the web anymore.
Also, on a cursory glance, the showcase on the top of the page seems to scroll between the three options more quickly than their content can be read. I realize there's a pause option, but perhaps mousing over the showcase will automatically pause the scroll until you move the mouse away. Generally if the mouse is focused on a web element it has the user's attention—the same user who might not have noticed the pause button—and making sure it doesn't slide away as he's reading it would be useful.
I have to admit, the design is so "new web smooth" that I get the impression it's based on a template purchased somewhere, but I have to remember that real people can make real dedicates sites.
Really, it's so much cleaner than what I'm used to seeing on these kinds of store sites. Kudos. Now I'll have to make an order some time to see if the service matches the site.