I'm tired of guessing, people.
You seem to be pretty bitter. I developed software professionally for a long time and provided you with more information than most anyone else in this profession ever gets in a bug report. I neglected to mention a sorting thinking that what is selected is a default value. If it isn't, it was changed a long time back and the software remembered the change (and I forgot that I selected it).
First you griped at me for not including the version number. That is simply lazy, as you will be using the most recent version and the bug is reproducible in it. That just meant you didn't even want to
try to see if you could reproduce the bug in the most recent version. You simply assumed that the person reporting the bug (me) is a moron incapable of your attention. Thanks for that.
Now you're annoyed because you had to make one additional selection in a dropdown listbox that must have taken you all of 10 seconds to realize you might have to try and half of one to execute to confirm. Seriously? I apologize for neglecting that detail, but you've figured it out so I guess it wasn't that huge of an inconvenience. Either that, or you are our omnipotent programming god and we should all bow before you.

Please take a moment to think about what it is you're actually doing. You're berating someone who is trying to help make a software product better. I'm sure I don't need to tell you that finding and squashing one crash bug may well illuminate a segment of code causing other crash bugs as well and fixing it may wipe a several out at one time, thus lightening the load. If you've gotten to the point where you're this bitter about the process, perhaps you should consider a different field. I do not doubt that you probably program professionally and support Evemon as a hobby in your spare time. I've been there and done that too, probably a lot more than you might imagine. I never let it get to the point where I felt I needed to abuse random people on the Internet over it just to blow off steam, though. Relax, man.
Don't be "Nick Burns, your Company's Computer Guy."