Thank you for your comments,
It's not clear whether you're only interested in Wine-related employers here, or any employer. For example, all of Martin Wilck's mails prominently display "Fujitsu Siemens", which would be hard to miss, but still isn't recorded in your list, yet Bill Medland is listed as "ACCPAC", so it's a little confusing.
Sorry for confusing you, I am interested in obtaining information about any employer, provided that they allow you (directly or simply by ignorance) to hack Wine during working time. When someone is sending mails from a Wine-related company, it's quite obvious that this is the case. But when the mail comes from a company, not directly affiliated with Wine, it might only be that the person is using his company mailbox. As for Martin Wilck, there were a lot of comments during the License-change debate that "This is not the view of my employer", so I came to the conclution that he probably only used the mailbox. He corrected me on this, and I am therefore grateful.
Also, if you belive that there are others who should be on this list, I've only got one person from Transgaming so far, don't they contribute or are they simply silent on the mailinglist?
Well, I'm pretty sure a few other TransGaming employees (like Gavriel State, David Hammerton, Peter Hunnisett) *have* been seen on the list, but probably only occasionally, maybe only a few postings in all of 2002. For the most part, issues with Wine (the free version) are my responsibility at TransGaming, so the others aren't seen much here. (I suppose they might still be interested in answering questions, though, if you want to ask them.)
Andreas Mohr,Codeweavers
Maybe Andreas can speak for himself, but just in case he doesn't: he's not at CodeWeavers. (His only affiliation was an internship a long time ago, if I remember right.)
Thanks, Andreas was another one of my uncertainties, in some Weekly list he was affiliated with CodeWeavers, and it sounded probable that someone that active should be paid in a project where many are.
Best Regards,
Stefan Görling