I use a search engine, I type out keywords related to my problem, then see where I end up - it doesn’t really matter where the information is, and sometimes it isn’t even on Epic’s own website, but on someone’s blog.
I don’t think I’m alone on this - and to me, and probably some others, this is bringing some déjà vu’s on how the wiki got nuked. The above is exactly how I got here. Just chiming in that keeping the existing information somehow available is still relevant.
I hadn’t posted anything to AnswerHub for quite some time. Part of that may have been the clunkiness of AnswerHub. But my experience with it was that there were either easy questions which were answered before you could refresh the page, harder questions where you’d need to fix someone’s project-specific problem and eye through their script or ask for more information, or just plain hard questions about the inner workings of the engine that you’d need to have dug three layers deep into the systems yourself to give an answer with some level of confidence.
Edit: As for the solution - I’m not really sure if either of them is meaningfully superior to the other. Solution A seems way more straightforward, but the forums would need more tools to handle the increased volume.