Here's the actual Document Foundation press release, without the adverts and typos: http://blog.documentfoundation.org/2012/02/23/the-document-foundation-announces-libreoffice-for-windows-from-suse-is-now-available-in-intel-appupsm-center/
Take a look at http://cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html#Citing-R
Most papers to use R (or other statistical software) will in fact cite it. R makes this easy, by providing built-in citation strings. Do this, and well-behaved researchers will cite your software.
This. Redshift is far and away the cheapest and most straightforward solution. Hooks up nicely with Tableau to help analysts, efficient ingestion.
Here's the actual Document Foundation press release, without the adverts and typos:
http://blog.documentfoundation.org/2012/02/23/the-document-foundation-announces-libreoffice-for-windows-from-suse-is-now-available-in-intel-appupsm-center/
Take a look at http://cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html#Citing-R
Most papers to use R (or other statistical software) will in fact cite it. R makes this easy, by providing built-in citation strings. Do this, and well-behaved researchers will cite your software.