It is interesting that nobody recommended using the official way of
installing Sage on windows, by using the virtual box images provided
on the website.

I have run into the problem of how to recommend Sage to students who
will mostly be running windows machines. Still looks like running Sage
on windows is kind of  awkward. Has there been any progress on the
mammoth task of porting Sage to windows?

Regards,

David M. Monarres
<[email protected]>



On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 12:31 PM, kcrisman <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I'd say that if you really want to develop Sage with your students on a
>> joint computer then you need to have direct access to a Linux machine. Its
>
> Or a Mac, if you set up ssh availability or whatever - # 7, Maarten
> says so.  But see # 3,4.
>
>
>> What solution is best for you really depends on how much you expect sage
>> will get used. I definitly advise you to have your own sage notebook server
>> running somewhere. And it would be best if that place was accesible from the
>> WWW so student can also use it from home.
>
> +1 very good idea.
>
>> (3,4) It would not be a large imposition on computer science since sage can
>> be installed without root acces they can just give you an account and the
>> possibility to run a web service. You or one of your students could then
>> install sage yourself, even installing non standard spkgs as you please.
>
> Yes, totally do this.  We have this and it works great.
>
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