You have experience with [Tcl]--certainly you're beyond the "[When all you want is to run a Tk application]" level. Someone hands you a '''.kit''' file (a.k.a. a [starkit]); what do you do with it? Experienced [Tcl'ers] know to run it against [Tclkit], that is, invoke tclkit some_application.kit As Tclkit is an important idea, perhaps you'll want to learn it, or at least enough about it to download the executable [http://www.equi4.com/pub/tk/] and launch the application that interests you. If not, perhaps you can find someone with more experience to "unpack" some_application.kit for you and forward the *.tcl sources (and perhaps other texts and binaries) it packages. At this level, you see, Tclkit is a way to wrap up an application into a single file; it can equally easily be unwrapped into pieces that might be more comprehensible to a newcomer to [Tclkit]. On Windows, just drag the .kit on top of tclkit.exe to run (or just double-click the .kit if things are set up correctly to open with tclkit.exe). ---- [Category Deployment] | [Category Tclkit]