I am taking Open MIT course. Not registered as a student at the university. How can I get MATLAB?
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Course exercises require MATLAB. How can I access MATLAB.
Respuestas (3)
Malcolm Lidierth
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
1 voto
Or try Octave which is free and open-source but best supported on Linux - runs fine with Debian Wheezy on a Raspberry Pi board which sets you back £25 in`UK money.
2 comentarios
Jan
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
You run Octave on a Pi?! This is worth a vote.
Malcolm Lidierth
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
@Jan
Yes
octave:1> ver
----------------------------------------------------------------------
GNU Octave Version 3.6.2 GNU Octave License: GNU General Public License
Operating System: Linux 3.6.11+ #371 PREEMPT Thu Feb 7 16:31:35 GMT 2013 armv6l
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Package Name | Version | Installation directory
--------------+---------+-----------------------
java *| 1.2.8 | /usr/share/octave/packages/java-1.2.8
Wayne King
el 3 de Mzo. de 2013
0 votos
You have to contact MathWorks for that.
1 comentario
Matt J
el 3 de Mzo. de 2013
Or contact MIT.
Walter Roberson
el 3 de Mzo. de 2013
0 votos
The Student Version of MATLAB is restricted to students enrolled at in degree program (or in K-13). The license is not available to those who are taking courses without being registered as students. The Professional license would be the appropriate license in such a case.
6 comentarios
James Tursa
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
K-13? I thought it was only high school or college. I need to look into that.
Image Analyst
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
I don't think any kindergartners around my neighborhood are using MATLAB.
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
Perhaps only high-school and up. When I wrote K-13 I was trying to avoid using terms like "secondary school" and "CEGEP" that do not exist in some places.
Eric
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
If I can get Octave to run on a Pi I might be teaching Matlab to my kindergartner next year.
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Mzo. de 2013
10. HIGH SCHOOL/PREUNIVERSITY USE. Teachers and students at preuniversity secondary education schools may license the Student Version. Teachers may also allow their students to use the Student Version License on the teacher's computer or school-owned computers.
In Canada, K-6 are usually called "elementary", and 7-8 are usually called "senior elementary", and 9-13 are usually called "secondary", but with some variation on this in Quebec. And in some places here, K-8 are all the same school, and in others 7-13 are the same school. Mathworks would, I speculate, be flexible if a teacher in a lower grade wanted to make MATLAB part of the course. But don't expect to be able to argue that you should be entitled to Student Version prices at home in order to homeschool your 3 year old ;-)
James Tursa
el 12 de Abr. de 2013
I noticed that there is a LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT submission in the FEX. Grade schoolers as young as 1st and 2nd grade are learning to program these (I know there are kids in my neighborhood elementary school doing this), so maybe it isn't out of the question to ask TMW if they would allow student versions of MATLAB for grade schoolers.
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