Tom Kent added the comment:
Christian's message indicated that a workaround was possible by adding
mozilla's certs to windows cert store.
I'm sure there are sysadmins who will really hate this idea, but I've
successfully implemented it in a windows docker image, an
Tom Kent added the comment:
A couple things...
>> One possible use-case is to package it along with another program to use the
>> interpreter.
> This is the primary use case. If you're doing something else with it, you're
> probably misusing it :)
Interesting,
Tom Kent added the comment:
I'm not sure I agree with that. One possible use-case is to package it along
with another program to use the interpreter. In this case they could use the
other program's native language features (e.g. .Net's Process.Start(), Win32
API's C
New submission from Tom Kent :
According to the documentation
https://docs.python.org/3/using/windows.html#windows-embeddable
> When extracted, the embedded distribution is (almost) fully isolated
> from the user’s system, including environment variables, system registry
> sett