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Re: TR: [sciclub] Scilab news


From: Doug Stewart
Subject: Re: TR: [sciclub] Scilab news
Date: Sat, 29 Nov 2003 08:10:43 -0500
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.5) Gecko/20031007

With this good news, I wounder if Andy Adler would put together a new version (with symbolic math in it?) . I know there are ways to do this myself (I would if i could), and there are instructions for doing it from octaves pages( I have done it this way.), but I like Andy's version much better.

Doug Stewart
PS  We have about 100 students using octave (3 different courses)..


address@hidden wrote:

I've removed the fork calls from the octave-2.1.50 distribution on
octave-forge (http://octave.sf.net).  I didn't like waiting ;-)

I'm using it successfully on WindowsME, and I believe it works on
Windows98.  IIRC, the patches have been applied upstream, so
any Octave 2.1.50 or above should work fine.

Paul Kienzle
address@hidden
The headaches are not Octave's fault. Cygwin doesn't work well on
Windows9X/ME. I had problems with a lot of other programs that are based
on it. There's a long standing issue with fork() that looks like will
never be fixed.

Given that all our computers are on Windows98 and ME we had no choice
but to drop Octave for Windows. Next year we'll try to get the teachers
and the students to use Linux, but it's going to be pretty hard. There
has been some "active resistance" against Linux that forced us to choose
SciLab, at least until the issues with these particular versions of
windows are solved, or until we upgrade our software (that will be an
extremely cold day in hell).

On Sat, 2003-11-29 at 08:28, Doug Stewart wrote:
What are the Headaches?  We should fix them.
Doug Stewart


Agustin Barto wrote:

We had a great two year run working with Octave after the local
authorities refused the funding for Matlab. Next year we'll be switching
to SciLab (the main reason is that the Windows version of Octave is
giving us a lot of headaches). This year we asked around and found out
that not only the introductory courses on programming were based on
Octave, but also numerical methods, some algebras and some advanced
electronics courses too (All of these used Matlab in the past). This was
much more than we expected.

On Fri, 2003-11-28 at 18:40, Raymond E. Rogers wrote:


$800 !!!!! At the insistence of my boss we just bought MatLab and a few packages for my work; for a grand total of about $8000. I tried to explain to him other options, Octave, J, SciLab; but various others are using Matlab so he went ahead.

Ray

Laurent Jacques wrote:
On Friday 28 November 2003 21:36, John W. Eaton wrote:
We run Octave but also Matlab in my lab (in a Belgian university) and this year we had to add just one user to our Matlab network licence. Mathworks refused to sell this separately but instead we had to buy a complete new Matlab distribution (the same that we had) with a special new license file allowing the new number of simultaneous users. All that costs around 800 $ !
But we have to be happy, for industrial use it is worst.

Laurent.




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