I realize now why Github is so awesome. For a site named <i>Source</i>forge, it sure takes a lot of searching to find the source code of whatever project you're looking at.<p>With Github, the source is the most important part of the site as a whole, and it shows.
Not a fan. I usually like "clean" designs but it doesn't automatically make it good.<p>Project homepages are the worst pages I've seen so far. Example: <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/" rel="nofollow">http://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/</a>. The details aren't well layed out and there's a lot of wasted space.
I wish they would respond to my numerous password recovery requests (which were due to them getting hacked few months ago and subsequently resetting all user passwords) instead of spending time on shiny stuff. And that's not even considering the existence of GitHub that's pretty much "SourceForge done right".<p>So, yeah, I don't know. I have few projects hosted on SF back from 5-6 years ago, but I think SF's time has passed, new look or not.
It's a great redesign (even if it's clear where they got the inspiration from) and one can only hope for a "<i>simple foundation for the rebirth of the entire SourceForge.net site</i>" as they say on the front page. Because it's been a while since I hosted my last project on SF, and it's been ages since I last saw <i>anyone</i> else use anything but GitHub for a code repository. SourceForge has de facto become a free distribution mechanism for binary installs now, but the actual source management has gone elsewhere. I love GitHub, but I'd really like to see SF stay competitive, too.