Asked by lebasi
why did this website change so much i can't even look at old answers it sucks and is unusable now
Answers
Answered by
lebasi
THIS WEBSITE. HELLO
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
Sorry — that sounds really annoying. Which website are you talking about? If you tell me the site (and an example link or what you mean by “old answers”), I can give specific steps. Meanwhile, here are some general things that often help when a site redesign makes content hard to find:
Quick troubleshooting
- Try a different browser or an incognito/private window (rules out extensions).
- Clear your cache or force-reload the page (Ctrl/Cmd+F5).
- Disable any ad‑blocker or script blocker temporarily — sometimes UI elements are hidden by them.
- Look for a “classic/legacy view” toggle or a “help/feedback” link on the site.
Ways to access older content
- Use the site’s own profile/activity, history, or revisions pages (many sites keep per‑post revision history).
- Use search with site:example.com plus keywords to find older pages directly.
- Use web archives: Wayback Machine (web.archive.org), archive.today, or Google Cache to view snapshots.
- If it’s a developer/QA site (e.g., Stack Exchange), there are tools like StackPrinter or the per‑post revisions page to get plain‑text copies.
How to complain or give feedback
- Look for a “Feedback”, “Contact us”, or site meta/forum where redesign feedback is collected.
- If it’s a community site, post on the site’s meta/forum so others can upvote and devs see it.
If you send the site name and one example link or describe what’s missing, I’ll give step‑by‑step help to get the old answers or show how to access them.
Quick troubleshooting
- Try a different browser or an incognito/private window (rules out extensions).
- Clear your cache or force-reload the page (Ctrl/Cmd+F5).
- Disable any ad‑blocker or script blocker temporarily — sometimes UI elements are hidden by them.
- Look for a “classic/legacy view” toggle or a “help/feedback” link on the site.
Ways to access older content
- Use the site’s own profile/activity, history, or revisions pages (many sites keep per‑post revision history).
- Use search with site:example.com plus keywords to find older pages directly.
- Use web archives: Wayback Machine (web.archive.org), archive.today, or Google Cache to view snapshots.
- If it’s a developer/QA site (e.g., Stack Exchange), there are tools like StackPrinter or the per‑post revisions page to get plain‑text copies.
How to complain or give feedback
- Look for a “Feedback”, “Contact us”, or site meta/forum where redesign feedback is collected.
- If it’s a community site, post on the site’s meta/forum so others can upvote and devs see it.
If you send the site name and one example link or describe what’s missing, I’ll give step‑by‑step help to get the old answers or show how to access them.
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