On Oct 9, 12:36 pm, Thorsten Kampe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > * Mensanator (Tue, 7 Oct 2008 10:58:24 -0700 (PDT)) > > > > > > > On Oct 7, 12:40 pm, Thorsten Kampe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > * Lawrence D'Oliveiro (Mon, 06 Oct 2008 23:18:10 +1300) > > > > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Thorsten Kampe > > > > wrote: > > > > > * Lawrence D'Oliveiro (Sun, 05 Oct 2008 22:13:46 +1300) > > > > > >> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Michel Claveau - > > > > >> NoSpam SVP ; merci wrote: > > > > > >> > Another way is to de-activate UAC. > > > > > >> Please don't be stupid! > > > > > > He's not stupid. Disabling UAC is the recommended way to get rid of > > > > > these problems. > > > > > Disabling UAC is NOT recommended. > > > > YOU don't recommend it. I don't "recommend" it either - all the people I > > > know (and this includes Microsoft techsupport people) do it anyway > > > without recommendation. > > > Be that as it may, it is still enabled by default, isn't it? > > > So advice that requires it to be disabled (or the Administrator > > account enabled) ought to mention such a pertinent fact, shouldn't it? > > The fact that it's enabled by default is totally irrelevant for the > advise.
You're talking about the wrong fact. The advice doesn't mention UAC. Here, let me quote it to you: <quote> Vista Note Administrators installing Python for all users on Windows Vista either need to be logged in as Administrator, or use the runas command, as in: runas /user:Administrator "msiexec /i <path>\<file>.msi" </quote> Now, how relevant is the state of the Administrator account for this advice to work? > > T. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list