by Tim Heuer via Method ~ of ~ failed by Tim Heuer on 5/3/2010 5:58:05 PM
There are a few ways to give feedback on Silverlight. I wanted to share my thoughts on them as some are obvious and some aren’t.
First and foremost, the team is currently (Apr-May 2010) conducting a public survey on the next version planning. We’ve put up a survey (yes it’s legit from Microsoft) for you to help provide some direction and help us further understand use-cases of Silverlight. Please take a few moments and complete the survey for me…I’d appreciate it:
Survey: Feedback on future versions of Silverlight
Ok, now on to some other mechanisms for you to constantly give feedback.
The product team and test team regularly monitor the Silverlight Forums. It is a great place to get your questions answered by other experts, community members and perhaps the product team directly. This is a good place to search for previous questions as well.
If you’ve scoured the forums, posted your question and didn’t get any answer and you think you’ve identified a bug, you can submit one. I’ll admit here this is a cumbersome process. We’re trying to improve it, I promise. I’ve been on some user studies with this team giving them feedback on that. Until then, here’s what you’d have to do:
Yes, I know it may seem odd, but for now that is a part of the process. If you submit a bug, be prepared to submit a reproduction of the bug. I can’t stress enough this fact: providing a reproducible project showing the potential bug is the fastest route to resolution.
Here’s my favorite part. If you think you’ve got a suggestion (not a bug) and want it on the wish list, then add it!
Visit http://silverlight.mswish.net to add your suggestions. Here is what I ask of you:
The team looks at this list to help prioritize and understand how people are using this. This list is always there and we’ll mark things planned/completed when we identify what we’ll be working on.
As always if you see something on my blog or other Silverlight team members’ blogs, leave a comment. We don’t go around announcing each other’s blog posts so if you send me a question about something David Poll wrote…it’s better to start with him first. Blogs are great sources of information but also can be hard to find specific bits of information at time. They are a mechanism for sharing bits and pieces. Usually you’ll find deep feature content from a program manager who owns that feature.
Hope this helps!
Original Post: Ways to give feedback on Silverlight
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