One of the sessions Don Vilen did last week at TechEd:Developers in Barcelona (that I helped with) was called The Doctor Is In: Tell Us Where It Hurts. It's basically a feedback gathering session for us and a way for customers to be able to discuss issues directly with a people from the SQL Product Group.
The most important thing that's showcased in that session is the http://connect.microsoft.com/sql website that allows all of you to submit feedback and suggestions. Anything that's submitted is put directly into our internal issue databases and we will communicate with you about the status of the issue, whether we may implement your suggestion in future, etc.
If you have any feedback, please take the time to make your voice heard!
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About Paul Randal - MSFT
Paul started in the industry in 1994 working for DEC on the VMS file system and check/repair tools.
In 1999 he moved to Microsoft to work on SQL Server, specifically on DBCC. For SQL Server 2000, he concentrated on index fragmentation (writing DBCC INDEXDEFRAG and DBCC SHOWCONTIG) plus various algorithms in DBCC CHECKDB. During SQL Server 2005 development Paul was the lead developer/manager of one the core dev teams in the Storage Engine, responsible for data access and storage (DBCC, allocation, indexes & heaps, pages/records, text/LOB storage, snapshot isolation, etc). He also spent several years rewriting DBCC CHECKDB and repair. For SQL Server 2008, Paul managed the Program Management team for the core Storage Engine to become more focused on customer/partner engagement and feature set definition.
In 2007, after 8.5 years on the SQL Server team, Paul left Microsoft to join his wife, Kimberly Tripp, running SQLskills.com and pursuing his passion for presenting and consulting.
Paul regularly presents at conferences and user groups around the world on high-availability, disaster recovery and Storage Engine internals. His popular blog is at http://www.sqlskills.com/blogs/paul/.