SomeIt didn't have to be this way. Maybe it still doesn't.
I understand the app being low priority if it wasn't getting used much and development resources were slim. But throwing manpower at a duplicate project when the one power users needed was languishing in bugs was not a good idea. Many of us have nearly abandoned using SE on the go because it's so frustrating.
If branding and searchability was the problem, I dare say most of us would have preferred see the existing app be rebranded to primarily serve SO with other sites buried in the UI somewhere if it meant getting some basic bug fixes in place rather than beingso that normal site functions worked once you picked your site. Being a die hard SE user and having my app issues ignored for a duplicate project focused on newbies seems like the opposite of what drew me to SE in the first place. At this point I can barely type through the crashes. but the development resources go to a duplicate?
If youyou'd updated itthe existing app to give power users something they didn't cringe when they had to use it I dare say it would have taken off faster in general. It might not be too late, but don't wait too long to get these projects back under the same roof. Two half baked apps doesn't do anybody any good. If the new app is better, hurry up and get it connected to all the sites. If the old app model is the future, hurry up and fix it so the basics work and the workflow isn't so cumbersome.