I was just awarded the golden windbg badge for 1000 score. I'm the first user to get this badge and it's my first golden tag badge.
Being the top user on this tag has been very helpful for me and my career. I have sold at least 2 debugging trainings for >5000 € each, solely because of Stack Overflow listing me in that high position.
I wanted to thank everyone helping me on my way to understanding WinDbg - even if I can deal with a narrow part of it only (mainly user mode and of that mainly .NET; definitely not kernel).
Thanks
- to Stack Overflow for the great site and bubbling up to the first results on Google
- to Hans Passant for the great insights and for regularly watching the WinDbg tag, not always answering, but at least commenting short, concise and with an astonishing hit rate. Also of course for various other answers on other people's questions from which I learned a lot.
- to blabb for his increasing activity in this tag, compensating my lack of kernel debugging
- to Marc Sherman for answering my questions when I didn't know much about WinDbg yet
- to members of the PyKd team and/or PyKd-Team for making scripting easier. One of my solutions for a client used a PyKd script which would otherwise have been almost impossible to solve with WniDbg alone.
- to EdChum for various insights and many comments
- to conio, snoone and Sean Cline for being helpful with comments several times even when the question remained unanswered and for correcting me in a friendly and humble way when I was wrong
- to anyone else on Stack Overflow teaching me to ask good questions. It wasn't always very welcoming, but definitely helpful. I can solve a lot of problems myself just because of the ability of thinking how I would describe the problem for Stack Overflow. That's awesome.
- to Microsoft for providing this "ugly" debugger for free.
- to Steve Johnson for providing the useful SOSex extension for analyzing .NET processes even more.
- to magicandre1981 answering Bluescreen issues on Super User and posting useful comments here on Stack Overflow.
- to everyone voting on my questions and answers.
A large part of this also made it possible to get my new job as a trainer and pass on my knowledge to students. I love this job and AFAIK, mentioning my SO profile helped me getting it.
Ok, well, this is not a question. And maybe I should have posted it as a comment under the blog post How This Git Whiz Grew His Career Through Stack Overflow, but anyway: thanks to all of you.