My understanding of Cloudflare's history is that they built their reputation and their client base on some high quality products.
And instead on focusing on maintaining those, they decided to go for more money, first adding new features on their products (at the risk of breaking them) and then adding new products altogether in a move to start being an actual cloud provider.
Priorities shifted from the quality products to pushing features daily, and the person who built and maintained the good products probably left or have been assigned to shinier products, leaving the base to decay.
As a daily user, its quite frustrating to have a console that is getting far worse than AWS/Azure, and features that are more a POC than actual production-ready features.
And instead on focusing on maintaining those, they decided to go for more money, first adding new features on their products (at the risk of breaking them) and then adding new products altogether in a move to start being an actual cloud provider.
Priorities shifted from the quality products to pushing features daily, and the person who built and maintained the good products probably left or have been assigned to shinier products, leaving the base to decay.
As a daily user, its quite frustrating to have a console that is getting far worse than AWS/Azure, and features that are more a POC than actual production-ready features.