Alan's suggestion is indeed the best. Besides you can copy the pspp directory from your old computer to your new computer. At that moment you only miss the file associations and the entry's in your start menu. Both can easily be created manually.
However as Alan already stated, I can't think of any reason why anybody would chose that pre-historic version above the current version. Have fun Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2018 11:29:54 -0600 > From: Alan Mead <am...@alanmead.org> > To: pspp-users@gnu.org > Subject: Re: Pspp 0.7.8 for windows 7 > Message-ID: <631d1c20-91e9-de37-520a-71842b9fa...@alanmead.org> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252" > > I didn't see those. I'm not sure those are "releases" and these tarballs > need to be compiled, which is far beyond the capabilities of most > Windows users. > > Harry Thijssen has put a lot of effort into creating cross-compiled > binaries for Windows and until someone creates a native Windows port, > Windows users should stick to the binaries that Harry provides at > http://pspp.awardspace.com or on sourceforge. > > Xavier's best bet is to find an old copy of one of Harry's 2011 binaries > of 0.7.8 somewhere on the net. Opensource means no one is going to stop > a user from using an ancient version of PSPP (whereas, try buying a 2011 > copy of SPSS), but the reality is that software "ages" and that's a good > reason to try to use the latest versions. > > -Alan > >
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