place (since both will work on macs, windows, (and while
vista's support isn't as good here) unix).
So now, the question becomes, why bother with minitab, since you could
provide training on software that they can have available (Excel, and
R or ViSta).
best,
-tony
--
A.J. Rossi
R come to
mind.
ViSta is click-and-point, with a number of nice features; R needs a
bit (MUCH!) more hand-holding, but pays off with the ability to do
much, much more when understood.
best,
-tony
--
A.J. RossiniRsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics
U. of Washington
inear models
(not general linear models!), correlated regression, event-time
regression analysis; robust numerical computations at the same
level, and a large set of tools.
However, more critical is, "what's missing in statistical languages?",
and I think that the answer are tools to
are other definitions, which have little to do with statistics.
best,
-tony
--
A.J. RossiniRsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics
U. of Washington Biostatistics [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FHCRC/SCHARP/HIV Vaccine Trials Net [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
>>>>> "DR" == Dennis Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
DR> At 03:08 PM 11/19/01 +, A.J. Rossini wrote:
>> >>>>> "BW" == Bruce Weaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> writes:
>>
BW> On Sun,
communicate with as well as handle data analyses appropriately for
clients and colleagues.
best,
-tony
--
A.J. RossiniRsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics
U. of Washington Biostatistics [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FHCRC/SCHARP/HIV Vaccine Trials Net [EMAIL P
There is always XLispStat, and the graphical front-ends, ViSta and
ARC.
Why pay more when there is perfectly adequate and exceptional software
available?
best,
-tony
--
A.J. RossiniRsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics
BlindGlobe Networks (home/default) [EMAIL
e more valuable than abstract
BH> computer science.
And for those that don't learn SAS, the biotech industry really likes
them for playing around with large data sets (the CS/Stat cross is
quite useful for genomics/proteonics, and similar genetic-level data
handling/analysi
statistical analysis, he'll work for years"?)
best,
-tony
--
A.J. Rossini Research Assistant Professor of Biostatistics
Biostatistics/Univ. of Washington (Th) Box 357232 206-543-1044 (3286=fax)
Center for AIDS Research/HMC/UW (M/F) Box 359931 206-731-36
ead of considering it (maybe
unfairly) a pretty useless piece of software...
best,
-tony
--
A.J. Rossini Research Assistant Professor of Biostatistics
Biostatistics/Univ. of Washington (Th) Box 357232 206-543-1044 (3286=fax)
Center for AIDS Research/HMC/UW (M/F) Box 35993
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