Every so often someone sends me, or the PuTTY team, an email whose gist is ‘I would like to discuss a [ business proposition | project | piece of work | half-baked idea | whatever ] with you’. No further information (but enough personalisation to be sure it isn't spam). We generally reply ‘go on then’, with varying degrees of sarcasm depending on mood, and then they send some details of their actual suggestion.
I've never quite understood why they bother with the initial zero-content opening email. It delays the useful part of the conversation by an entire round trip, and doesn't seem to serve any useful purpose. I suppose if the description of the idea was going to be very long, they might feel it was worth giving us a chance to say ‘don't bother’ before they went to the effort of typing it all up, but if they don't give any detail in the first message then there's no way we can make an intelligent judgment about whether we're interested! (Well, except that if the mail talks about a ‘business proposition’ then they tend to be to do with website advertising, so we're usually not. But occasionally they want to pay us to add a useful feature to PuTTY, so we can't even reject them on that basis until we know more.)
Thinking about it further, I suppose that provided the opening email at least mentions PuTTY (which they do generally manage to, and that's one of the ways I decide they're not spam) it does at least avoid the risk of the sender typing up a huge project description and then finding they've sent it to completely the wrong address by mistake. Though in that situation you'd think they could easily enough recover it from their outgoing mail archive and send it to the right address instead...
ie: Feature suggestion: this has been suggested already and is a nice to have but extremely technically difficult and timeconsuming so low-priority unless you want to fund this.. *grin*.
You probably get lots of the same suggestions over and over again...
-grue-