hans> I'm putting together info on what Free Software hans> we want to support on m$. ... hans> Anything else that should be listed? Any of hans> that that should be left out? Are we going to hans> be able to support installing those on m$ boxen hans> at IF2? VIM, or more correctly GVIM (Graphical VI Improved) runs great on Windows. I downloaded it and installed it on my XP in a couple of minutes, and recommended to the students in my Unix/Linux class who have difficulty getting to the school (UAT) to "practice" using vi that they put it on their personal Windows systems and use it permanently as their editor of choice rather than either of those preposterous so-called plain text editors that come with Windows. And need I add that XEmacs is well-supported on Windows and has been for years?[1] I have it and would run it more myself, except that XEmacs is more of a whole operating environment than just a text editor, and accordingly takes lots more memory, etc., so when I need a plain text editor for a quick job, I will just pop up VIM. I will never again use Notepad or Wordpad for any purpose. Footnotes: [1] In contrast, GNU Emacs is *not* supported, no doubt because of the neo-apartheid philosophies of RMS and his cronies which will probably prevent a porting effort from ever taking place. But that's all right, because XEmacs is orders of magnitude better than GNU Emacs anyhow. -- Lynn David Newton Phoenix, AZ