Now, to install the application. Assuming that you have a reasonable version of Python on your system, running **./nosudo-virtualenv.sh** should set up the environment. If it succeeds, you'll see the help output for a command named paster.
-Run the application by changing into your environment with **source tg2env/bin/activate** and then typing **paster serve development.ini**. And voila; a very boilerplate TurboGears install should be facing you at http://localhost:8080
+Run the application by changing into your environment with **source tg2env/bin/activate** and then typing **paster serve --reload development.ini**. And voila; a very boilerplate TurboGears install should be facing you at http://localhost:8080
+
+If these steps fail (which happens on some configurations of OS X and almost invariably on Windows), talk to us and we can get you set up with a copy running on scripts.mit.edu or xvm.mit.edu.
+
+Once you're running, here are some paths to take:
+
+1. Take a break and read some TurboGears documentation to get a feel for the framework
+2. Browse through the todo list, pick a task that seems interesting, and start working on figuring out how to make it work
+3. Browse the source, fiddle with some variables, see what changes
+4. Decide what clockworks should look like, and take off
-The stage is yours.
## Development info
* Xavid Pretzer
* Christian Ternus
* David Benjamin
+* Paul W. Quimby
* <a href="mailto:clockworks@mit.edu">You?</a>
+
+