Michigan Vs Duke coverage hit by site incompatibility and '429 Too Many Requests' error
Coverage of michigan vs duke was interrupted when one page returned a prominent "Your browser is not supported" message saying the site was rebuilt to use the latest technology, and a separate page surfaced a "429 Too Many Requests" error with no further text. The technical messages limited readers' access to reporting and concrete game details.
Site message said the site was rebuilt to use the latest technology
One page displayed a headline reading "Your browser is not supported" and a full-message explaining that the publisher had rebuilt its site to take advantage of the latest technology. That message stated the changes were intended to make the site "faster and easier to use, " and it told readers to "Please download one of these browsers for the best experience. " Those instructions appeared inline with the compatibility notice.
Compatibility message explicitly told readers to download browsers
The compatibility page went beyond a brief alert: it framed the rebuild as a reader-focused move, saying the redesign was meant to "ensure the best experience for all of our readers. " It then issued the direct guidance to "download one of these browsers for the best experience, " linking browser choice to access. The combination of a rebuilt site, a browser compatibility block and the download prompt created a clear barrier for some visitors.
Separate page returned the plain '429 Too Many Requests' title and no article text
On another page, users encountered a standalone headline: "429 Too Many Requests. " That page carried no article text beneath the title, leaving the message isolated and the content unavailable. The bare error headline and the absence of supporting copy meant that readers who reached that page received only the error label rather than reporting or context.
What these errors mean for Michigan Vs Duke readers
For anyone seeking coverage of michigan vs duke, the two interruptions—the compatibility notice that emphasized a technology-driven redesign and asked readers to download recommended browsers, and the separate "429 Too Many Requests" error page with no body copy—combined to restrict access. The compatibility notice emphasized speed and ease of use as goals of the rebuild, while the error headline provided no further information. Together, they left coverage inaccessible in the moments those pages were encountered.