What Does the Future Hold for GNU Octave?
nicsterrr asks: "Since returning to education and discovering the delights of signal processing and numerical computation, I have become increasingly unhappy with Matlab. Mathworks refuse to release the Linux student version of Matlab in Europe (their official reason is that apparently us Europeans would pirate it frantically if they did), and hence I have had to run the windows version with Wine (with moderate success). I (and many others) would love to use Octave as our primary numerical computation package, but it is limited in areas such as signal processing, control systems, and especially graphical functions. Their homepage does not give much insight into Octave's current development and likely future. How many people are involved in Octave, or would like to be? Am I one of many that feel a new, concerted effort should be taken to transform Octave into a complete replacement for Matlab? This is a critical piece of open source software for universities and the lack of a Matlab replacement is one of the reasons my department frowns on our requests for Linux based PCs."
A small number of us been using Octave as a Matlab replacement on our Linux and Windows (Cygwin) machines for some time now (and secretly saving our company $$$) doing some signal/image processing numerical work. It functions remarkably well as a Matlab replacement (a few quirks here and there). Since it is free software, it is a compelling alternative to the $$$ we have to pay for extra modules for Matlab.
Remember, since the source code is available, it is easy to add stuff that you need.
Make sure to check out Paul Kienzle's Octave-forge [link to tarball] (formerly named "signalPAK", then "octavePAK", then "matcompat"). It adds alot of matlab compatible .m files, his
web page is
here but doesn't seem to be updated to mention the new octave-forge package.
You might want to have a look at other alternatives such as Scilab. Other free mathematical programs also exist, but scilab and octave seem to be the closest in spirit (and language) to matlab.
The department's frowning on Linux-based PCs because you can't get the student edition of Matlab in Europe?
Your department shouldn't be installing student edition on any institutional PCs anyway. Student edition is for students' personal machines.
Also, this link says "Release 12 of MATLAB Student Version, including MATLAB 6 and Simulink 4, is now available to students worldwide." Maybe that's not including the Linux version.
So, suffice to say I'm confused. Mathworks will sell your school all the non-student-edition copies it wants for any platform, regardless of whether you're in the US. So where's the problem?
The page contains links to a wish-list of features they'd like added, as well as links to their mailing list and it's archives. No point in asking the same questions over again.
I could be wrong, but I think this is the page you're looking for...