
Just imagine the a school teacher who in good faith wants to introduce his pupils to the wonderful programming language of Python, but when he installs it, all kinds of scary looking warnings drive him off. Vista is, like it or not, going to be very prevalent. If we want
-----Original Message----- From: "Martin v. Löwis" [mailto:martin@v.loewis.de] python
to be easily accessible to the masses, we mustn't take an elitist attitude or else risk scaring people off.
I'm completely in favor of fixing actual bugs. However, I'm not aware of any (related to Vista). That it is not logo compliant is *not* a bug. Python hasn't been logo compliant for more than a decade now (the "install to Program Files" is not a new requirement, but existed since Win95).
I'm not saying that it is a bug, but since this is python-dev, I am discussing it as a desirable "feature". One feature that is easily addable and will certainly make installing python on vista nicer, is to add authenticode signing to the install. Currently the user is faced with a very nasty and off-putting message about an unidentified program requesting access to his computer. See http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb172338.aspx . I think the PSF should be able to obtain a certificate from MS. cheers, Kristján