Gnuplot, Gnu Octave, or something with R, might prove interesting for
that crowd.

Kurt

On Wed, Nov 18, 2015 at 12:35 PM, James Rankin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Higher education. Lots of physics, engineering, science stuff that runs on 
> Linux...
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
> On Behalf Of Peter van Houten
> Sent: 18 November 2015 20:33
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [NTSysADM] Re:Common Linux apps
>
> What business is the client in?
>
>
>>     On Nov 18, 2015 1:47 PM, "James Rankin" <[email protected]
>>     <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>
>>         Am building a demo environment and I’ve been asked to also
>>         demonstrate the provision of some Linux-based apps. Not being
>>         much of a Linux type, I have no idea what would be a good
>>         “common”Linux-only app to put in there. Anyone got any ideas
>>         what I could drop in (obviously, free is best) to demonstrate
>>         this capability? I know there is OpenOffice, but that’s kinda
>>         like demonstrating Windows app deployment just by using
>>         Microsoft Office. Ideally, it would be something fairly
>>         intensive that doesn’t require much config, costs nothing, and
>>         that businesses can maybe identify with.
>>
>>         Sorry if the NT list is the wrong place for this, but you guys
>>         normally know something about everything J
>>
>>
>>         Cheers,
>>
>>         *James Rankin*
>>
>>         EUC Director | HTG TaloSys | 07809 668579 | [email protected]
>>
>>         One Trinity Green, Eldon Street, South Shields, Tyne & Wear,
>>         NE33 1SA
>>
>>         Tel: 0191 481 3489
>>
>>         Email address: [email protected]
>>
>>         Website: www.talosys.co.uk
>
>


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