Again, yes, I've seen that with VFP. In fact, VFP 9.0 was a direct result of user requests. If weren't for the team listening to users, and pushing those requests inside Microsoft, VFP 8 would have been the last version.
The most recent VFP hot fixes are also a direct result of user requests. And the developers that worked on them did so on their own time because the VFP team had been dissolved and they were on other projects.
I've also seen it with .Net. I can't speak for other Microsoft products because I haven't met as often with those teams.
>Couldn't be VFP. Was allways several years behind the rest of Windows. Just search the UT for "black hole".
>I don't argue about anything else. And I do not vote for a company known for decades for vaporware and hypes. Not if I can avoid it.
Craig Berntson
MCSD, Microsoft .Net MVP, Grape City Community Influencer