R is an alternative. Or jamovi which is based on R but has a graphical
user interface like IBM SPSS Statistics / PSPP. Both are free of charge.
https://www.jamovi.org/
Kind regards
Am 04.09.2021 um 16:24 schrieb Julia Klausli, Ph.D.:
Thank you for the update.
I guess it means ultimately needing to find a new software for our
students many of whom are PC users.
PSPP has been a really nice option but I can see the decision to not
update moving forward.
Best,
Julia Klausli, Ph.D., LPCA
Program Director
Assistant Professor, M.S. in Psychology
jklausli....@divinemercy.edu <mailto:jklausli....@divinemercy.edu>
Divine Mercy University
45154 Underwood Lane
Sterling, VA 20166
On 4. Sep 2021, at 04:00, John Darrington
<j...@darrington.wattle.id.au <mailto:j...@darrington.wattle.id.au>>
wrote:
On Wed, Sep 01, 2021 at 05:59:36PM +0200, Harry Thijssen wrote:
Older versions of PSPP for MSwindows are still available on:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/pspp4windows/files/
<https://sourceforge.net/projects/pspp4windows/files/>
I have no intention to remove these versions so I guess they will be
available for a long time. However as pointed out I won't be
building new
builds. So the published builds are more and more outdated.
Harry's last published build is of version 1.4.1 which is the most
recently
released PSPP version. There have been no releases since then.
So I wonder if it wouldn't make sense to restore this link to
pspp4windows
(with a note to say that it'll not be updated in the future).
J'