Steve Dower added the comment:

I suspect PYTHONHOME is the problem and not the installation method. There have 
been thousands of (presumably successful) installations of Python 3.5, and I 
expect most of them are just for the current user (as that's the default). If 
these were all failing for this reason, we'd have heard before now :)

There are likely to be some configurations that will cause the initial install 
to fail if you aren't running as an administrator, but that doesn't sound like 
the issue here.

Rogue installers that write to Python's registry keys (e.g. Anaconda) are more 
likely to cause problems here, as are those that globally set environment 
variables like PYTHONHOME/PYTHONPATH. If, like me, you install a lot of 
different bundles to figure out which is best, then some of these may be 
lingering around.

But I'm 99.99% certain that our installer is not at fault and there's nothing 
to fix here.

----------
resolution:  -> not a bug
status: open -> closed

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Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue27054>
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