Hi Andreas,

another reason that I forgot was that we had too many versions of the
installmanual and the release notes. For many old releases we've kept
them in 14 languages for every architecture (around 10) for each old release.
E.g.:
https://web.archive.org/web/20230625201750/https://www.debian.org/releases/jessie/releasenotes
https://web.archive.org/web/20230625201754/https://www.debian.org/releases/jessie/installmanual


That made our own search engine produce very bad results, because
often if shows results for old releases instead on hits from the
newest installation manual. Our search engine cannot sort the result
by date btw. Someone said we should fix this problem,
but as noone worked on this I tried to produce better results by
removing old content. I don't think that many people need the old
version of the installation manual of releases, that are not supported
by Debian or even by the LTS people any more. Do you think that people
need the release notes because they want to install Debian jessie
nowadays? We always have archive.org or softwareheritage for thoses
information.

In the past we've built every release note for two (or was it three?)
releases 6 times a days regardless if the sources of the release notes
had changed or not. I improved the build time a lot by adding code
that only build them (for all languages and architectures) if
something changed. Maybe you remember this improvement.

I try to have the point of view from the user of our web pages. If
they look or search for information on our web pages and get old and
outdated search results, then our web page is useless for them. The
ratio of old to new content on our webpages was very bad in the
past. That's why I try to remove old content.

-- 
regards Thomas

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