On Mon, 2009-02-09 at 07:18 -0300, Faramir wrote: > James Turner escribió: > ... > > My wife uses a Linux desktop, and is taking a stats class as part of her > > graduate program. Since SPSS doesn't run on Linux, I suggest she see if > > she can use PSPP instead. Things looked good, until her professor came > > back and said that he couldn't find chi-squared or ANCOVA in PSPP. Can > > anyone help out here?
One of the reasons a project like PSPP is so valuable is because of the ridiculous price / licensing terms that SPSS uses. However, this is somewhat mitigated for students. Your wife should be able to by a "student" version of SPSS fairly cheaply through the university. This version of SPSS will have all of the analysis tools available in a normal version of SPSS. The student version has some restrictions (I forget the details) regarding the size of the dataset it can work with. They limit the number of rows, but I'm sure the restrictions are well above what she would need for a basic stats class. Also, newer versions of SPSS are written in Java, and are thus naturally cross-platform. Here is a thread about installing SPSS 16 under Ubuntu that may be of use / interest: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=724613 Although I use FOSS whenever possible, there are times when I must use proprietary software (including SPSS). Fortunately, companies are starting to recognize / support Linux, making it easier for us to use Linux as a primary computer platform. Enjoy. -- This is the price and the promise of citizenship. -- Barack Obama, 44th President of the United States _______________________________________________ Pspp-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pspp-users
