Quoting Joe Landman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on Tue 20 Nov 2007 04:09:04 PM PST:

Jim Lux wrote:

Octave: http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/

Octave is nice, but.... the graphics are MUCH better in Matlab, and

Agreed.  Octave uses Gnuplot which is OK.

Gnuplot is fine until you want to do something like plot the time varying electric field around an antenna in 3D with little arrows showing the Poynting vector. I did start writing a little library to take the output of NEC (EM modeling code) and generate POVray input files from it. But I got distracted by other things.


there's all those toolboxes full of cool stuff (signal processing, control systems, maps, etc.)

Octave has quite a few as well, though they are not identical to the
Matlab versions.


And, an academic license for Matlab is only $100.  That's less than the

Anyone need an adjunct ... :) I was under the impression that the
license fees were much stiffer than that.  For a cluster, $100*N for N
= 16 .. 32 is not bad at all.  Or am I missing something.

That's the price for a student getting a copy for their own machine. They have other schemes for students running on university owned machines, etc. (all carefully designed to avoid rampant illegal copying, I'm sure)

You do raise an interesting question. Would one student running an application on N machines need N copies under their academic student license?

And, most universities, I'm told, require undergrads to have a computer (even a certain type of computer).. how long before they're required to have a cluster.

Jim







_______________________________________________
Beowulf mailing list, [email protected]
To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit 
http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf

Reply via email to