Microsoft's "Coding 4 Fun" website referenced below is ostensibly intended
to boost hobby coding on the MS platform. But my understanding is that
Microsoft has one of those "we own you, body and soul, and everything you
create is owned by us" employee contracts. So you can't code for fun and
release the code if you are a Microsoft employee, unless you can somehow get
through the MS legal department.

Therefore KPL was not developed by Microsoft employees. And it doesn't
appear to be open source, either. (No source code available, and I couldn't
find any explicit license, other than a statement that it was "freeware".)

David H

On Mon, Oct 03, 2005 at 02:13:58PM -0700, Guido van Rossum wrote:
> Has anyone looked at this yet?
> 
> http://msdn.microsoft.com/coding4fun/
> 
> http://www.computerworld.com/developmenttopics/development/story/0,10801,105100,00.html
> 
> --
> --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
> _______________________________________________
> Edu-sig mailing list
> Edu-sig@python.org
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig
> 

-- 
David Handy
Computer Programming is Fun!
Beginning Computer Programming with Python
http://www.handysoftware.com/cpif/
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