My university used R for all sorts of things in the biology department.
My wife who is a biologist but not a computer lover practically broke
down in tears one afternoon after trying to get R to do what it was
supposed to. She said she wasn't alone in her frustration with the
program. Thus, my only suggestion would be that if you use R, make sure
you provide clear instruction to people who are not highly computer
literate.

-Nick

---
Nicholas Floersch (pr. Floor-sh)
Stone Environmental, Inc. 
-----Original Message-----
From: Vermont Area Group of Unix Enthusiasts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Richard Lawrence
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2008 12:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Anyone using FOSS for scientific computing?

Hi everyone,

I have a topic to throw out for discussion, if anyone is interested:
how many of you are using FOSS for academic or scientific computing?
Have you been successful with it?  Do you find yourselves fighting a
tide of money, bureaucracy, etc., or is your environment more receptive
to FOSS than perhaps the general public is?

I'm thinking of Numpy/Scipy here, Octave, R, etc. as alternatives to
things like Matlab and SPSS.

I ask because I recently moved to Philadelphia to start a job as a
programmer and research coordinator in a psychology lab.  I accepted the
job largely because I thought I would be working in Python, writing FOSS
data analysis programs that would be used both in this lab and
distributed freely.  As it turns out, my lab is extremely Matlab focused
(which means that any code I write can't be run by anyone who doesn't
pay the $$$$ for the proprietary Matlab license, unless I spend time
making it compatible with Octave), and the principal investigator
consistently chides me for pushing for greater Python and Octave use.
(Yesterday, he said, "Your first name is Richard...but your last name's
not Stallman, right?")  He also has what I consider to be slightly
suspect ideas about what it means to be a steward of taxpayer dollars.

All of this is a little odd to me, because according to lab lore, at one
time you weren't allowed to graduate if you had never compiled a kernel.
 Now, we're all on OS X.

Have others encountered this scenario?  Did you have any success pushing
back?  Do you have a persuasive counter-argument to the "pragmatism, not
idealism" sentiment that has apparently won out here?

Richard

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