The place is very nice and comfortable inside. Definitely not stuck in the seventies. The tapestries on the walls are a very nice touch! The appliances are newer. The unit managers were responsive, nice and helpful for the few questions/issues we had.
The living room TV and the downstairs bedroom TV are both HUGE and sit on the floor so they are a little hard to see from much of the room. There is no cable TV, so expect to be watching the selection of DVDs (good selection of mostly 80s-2000s movies with, somewhat oddly, 2 copies of a lot of the titles; no kids movies). No Netflix, AppleTV, etc.
The BIGGEST drawback of the unit is that it is advertised, without any qualification, as Ski-In/Ski-Out. It is going to be very uncertain whether you will be able to take advantage of Ski-In/Ski-Out. It will mainly depend on the weather conditions and your skill level. The Mammoth Ski Back Trail is what you will use for Ski-In/Ski-Out, and it runs right behind the complex, only about 30 yards from the back door of Building N that the unit is in. It is a fairly steep slope up to the Ski Back Trail and there is no real/apparent/maintained path to the trail from anywhere in the complex to the trail. It is more like Hike-Out. If there is snow you will have to try to trudge through the old tracks you can find in the snow from those who came before you, or try to make your own path. I would think anything over 8-12 inches and the hike up to Ski-Out really is not worth it because you will be sinking in and worn out. There had been a big storm right before we got there. I got about 5 yards onto the trail before I was sinking thigh deep into the snow (about 2-2.5 feet). It would have taken at least an hour and a ton of energy to get up the hill, so I ended up just walking to Canyon Lodge, which ends up being about 10-15 minutes.
Regarding Ski-In, the Ski Back Trail is not that easy to find on the mountain (it is about halfway down Chair 7 right next to a storage lot for snowcats and buses). Once I found it I was able to ski-in to the unit's building's backdoor. Again, you may be going through deeper powder like I did (or I could see it being pretty hard and crunchy if it hadn't snowed for awhile), and it is fairly steep, so you have to be a comfortable/experienced skier or boarder (not necessarily suitable for beginners and smaller children) to use the Ski-In feature.