It appears that hindi.exe installs Uniscribe - which, AFAIK, is not permitted by Microsoft - so much for honouring license agreements!
That's another reason why they'd package it as an EXE. - rick cameron -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, 6 March 2002 12:14 To: Yaap Raaf Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Devanagari enthousiasm! On 06-03-2002 04:29:20 PM Yaap Raaf wrote: >At 14:02 +0100 2002.03.06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >I am on a Mac and can't open it, Well, this is going to be a problem for non-Windows clients, I admit. >it's a >244K .exe Why an .exe? I don't know if this is what the BBC was trying to do, but using an executable installer package is at least one way to make sure people see the license agreement... Bob

