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There is a link "Email" under the "This Blog" heading
at the top of the left-side frame. (So yes, you did miss
something!) That gets you to a contact form that goes to someone
who actually answers. I used it to question inclusion of a link to
a 2-year-old article, and was challenged to find a better list of cool
Mono apps.<br><br>
Is IronPython actually considered to be a "Mono app"? I
would have thought that it's a .Net app that works on Mono. But
that's me...<br><br>
At 01:27 PM 12/11/2006, M. David Peterson wrote<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">(in other words, I agree -- this
would be a smart way to attempt to get the article fixed. But after
looking for a way to contact the author, I came up the mentioned linked
page. Not a whole lot you can do about it when there is no known
way to contact the author, and the author, for all intents and purposes,
is unknown, the post attributed to "Coding4Fun") <br><br>
On 12/11/06, <b>M. David Peterson</b>
<<a href="mailto:xmlhacker@gmail.com">xmlhacker@gmail.com</a>>
wrote:<br>
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<dd>Fair enough, but after looking for a contact email, this is what I
found >
<a href="http://blogs.msdn.com/user/Profile.aspx?UserID=4539">
http://blogs.msdn.com/user/Profile.aspx?UserID=4539 </a>< Did I miss
something? <br><br>
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<dd>On 12/11/06, Keith J. Farmer</b>
<<a href="mailto:kfarmer@thuban.org"> kfarmer@thuban.org</a>>
wrote:<br>
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<dd>The "not posting a comment" isn't meant to be taken as an
exclusive thing. In my experience, authors don't generally read
comments as often as commenters would like to believe. Ergo, if you
want to see corrections to a post happen, email the person
directly.</blockquote>
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</dl>[snip]<br>
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J. Merrill / Analytical Software Corp</html>