>...
>
> Here are the lines from the MVP home page that I believe have already posted before:
>
> Microsoft Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs) are exceptional technical community leaders from around the world who are awarded for voluntarily sharing their high quality, real world expertise in offline and online technical communities. Microsoft MVPs are a highly select group of experts that represents the technical community's best and brightest, and they share a deep commitment to community and a willingness to help others.>
https://mvp.support.microsoft.com/default.aspx>
>...
> --
> Eric den Doop
>
www.foxite.com - The Home Of The Visual FoxPro Experts
Maybe so, but then why is it that MVP's are always related to a certain technology and not as-is?
How come that, looking at the MVP awardees list I see all awarded persons listed under a certain technology? Doesn't that tie the award to a technology? Maybe I still understand wrong and maybe the information, given in, let's say, a VISIO related community is of the same value for a person who seeks C# information. In al honesty I ask, am I missing something here?
To be perfectly clear, I do NOT doubt that you are dedicated to VFP. Otherwise this very site (to name just one example) would simply not exist. Just to refresh your memory, I am just as dedicated both towards the site as well as VFP.
Remember the time the site was moving from Texas to the Netherlands?
I do recall that the server has been runing a while from my home till late 2002, on a server I bought. My sole motivation was because at that time you were about to give up on foxite, a site that was valuable for many persons at that time already.
Boudewijn Lutge®ink
http://www.vfpdevelopers-online.comThere's a light at the end of the tunnel, let's just hope it is not the headlight of a freight-train. And indeed it is not, it is the headlight of the traction-engine of MS Marketing dept.