How to contact Raymond

Date:September 22, 2004 / year-entry #345
Tags:pages
Orig Link:https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20040922-00/?p=37783
Comments:    0
Summary:If your subject matter is a suggestion for a future topic, please post it to the Suggestion Box (using the Suggestion Box link on the side of the page). If you send it to me directly, I will probably lose track of it. If your subject matter is personal (for example "Hi, Raymond, remember me?...

If your subject matter is a suggestion for a future topic, please post it to the Suggestion Box (using the Suggestion Box link on the side of the page). If you send it to me directly, I will probably lose track of it.

If your subject matter is personal (for example "Hi, Raymond, remember me? We went to the same high school..."), you can send email using the Contact page. (Update 25 March 2007: The contact page has been disabled because over 90% of the messages that arrive are spam.)

I do not promise to respond to your message.

If you are making a suggestion for a future version of a Microsoft product, submit it directly to Microsoft rather than sending it to me, because I won't know what to do with it either.

I do not provide one-on-one technical support. If your question is of general interest, you can post it to the Suggestion Box. If you are looking for technical support, there are a variety of options available, such as newgroups, bulletin boards, forums (fora?), and Microsoft's own product support web site.



*DISCLAIMER: I DO NOT OWN THIS CONTENT. If you are the owner and would like it removed, please contact me. The content herein is an archived reproduction of entries from Raymond Chen's "Old New Thing" Blog (most recent link is here). It may have slight formatting modifications for consistency and to improve readability.

WHY DID I DUPLICATE THIS CONTENT HERE? Let me first say this site has never had anything to sell and has never shown ads of any kind. I have nothing monetarily to gain by duplicating content here. Because I had made my own local copy of this content throughout the years, for ease of using tools like grep, I decided to put it online after I discovered some of the original content previously and publicly available, had disappeared approximately early to mid 2019. At the same time, I present the content in an easily accessible theme-agnostic way.

The information provided by Raymond's blog is, for all practical purposes, more authoritative on Windows Development than Microsoft's own MSDN documentation and should be considered supplemental reading to that documentation. The wealth of missing details provided by this blog that Microsoft could not or did not document about Windows over the years is vital enough, many would agree an online "backup" of these details is a necessary endeavor. Specifics include:

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