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author John W. Eaton <jwe@octave.org>
date Thu, 12 Jan 2012 14:30:35 -0500
parents 39c0e0069895
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@c Copyright (C) 1996-2012 John W. Eaton
@c
@c This file is part of Octave.
@c
@c Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
@c under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
@c Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at
@c your option) any later version.
@c 
@c Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
@c ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
@c FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
@c for more details.
@c 
@c You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
@c along with Octave; see the file COPYING.  If not, see
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

@ifclear AUTHORSONLY
@node Preface
@unnumbered Preface
@cindex contributors
@cindex history

Octave was originally intended to be companion software for an
undergraduate-level textbook on chemical reactor design being written by
James B. Rawlings of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and John
G. Ekerdt of the University of Texas.

Clearly, Octave is now much more than just another `courseware' package
with limited utility beyond the classroom.  Although our initial goals
were somewhat vague, we knew that we wanted to create something that
would enable students to solve realistic problems, and that they could
use for many things other than chemical reactor design problems.
We find that most students pick up the basics of Octave quickly, and are
using it confidently in just a few hours.

Although it was originally intended to be used to teach reactor design,
it has been used in several other undergraduate and graduate
courses in the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of
Texas, and the math department at the University of Texas has been using
it for teaching differential equations and linear algebra as well.
More recently, Octave has been used as the primary computational tool
for teaching Stanford's online Machine Learning class
(@url{ml-class.org}) taught by Andrew Ng.  Tens of thousands of students
participated in the course.

If you find Octave useful, please let us know.  We are always interested
to find out how Octave is being used.

Virtually everyone thinks that the name Octave has something to do with
music, but it is actually the name of one of John W. Eaton's former
professors who wrote a famous textbook on chemical reaction engineering,
and who was also well known for his ability to do quick `back of the
envelope' calculations.  We hope that this software will make it
possible for many people to do more ambitious computations just as
easily.

Everyone is encouraged to share this software with others under the
terms of the GNU General Public License (@pxref{Copying}).  You are 
also encouraged to help make Octave more useful by writing and 
contributing additional functions for it, and by reporting any problems
you may have.

@menu
* Acknowledgements::            
* How You Can Contribute to Octave::  
* Distribution::                
@end menu

@node Acknowledgements
@unnumberedsec Acknowledgements
@cindex acknowledgements
@end ifclear

Many people have contributed to Octave's development.  The
following people have helped code parts of Octave or aided in
various other ways (listed alphabetically).

@include contributors.texi

@ifclear AUTHORSONLY
Special thanks to the following people and organizations for
supporting the development of Octave:

@itemize @bullet
@item
The United States Department of Energy, through grant number
DE-FG02-04ER25635.

@item
Ashok Krishnamurthy, David Hudak, Juan Carlos Chaves, and Stanley
C. Ahalt of the Ohio Supercomputer Center.

@item
The National Science Foundation, through grant numbers CTS-0105360,
CTS-9708497, CTS-9311420, CTS-8957123, and CNS-0540147.

@item
The industrial members of the Texas-Wisconsin Modeling and Control
Consortium (@uref{http://www.che.utexas.edu/twmcc, TWMCC}).

@item
The Paul A. Elfers Endowed Chair in Chemical Engineering at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison.

@item
Digital Equipment Corporation, for an equipment grant as part of their
External Research Program.

@item
Sun Microsystems, Inc., for an Academic Equipment grant.

@item
International Business Machines, Inc., for providing equipment as part
of a grant to the University of Texas College of Engineering.

@item
Texaco Chemical Company, for providing funding to continue the
development of this software.

@item
The University of Texas College of Engineering, for providing a
Challenge for Excellence Research Supplement, and for providing an
Academic Development Funds grant.

@item
The State of Texas, for providing funding through the Texas
Advanced Technology Program under Grant No. 003658-078.

@item
Noel Bell, Senior Engineer, Texaco Chemical Company, Austin Texas.

@item
John A. Turner, Group Leader, Continuum Dynamics (CCS-2), Los Alamos
National Laboratory, for registering the @url{octave.org} domain name.

@item
James B. Rawlings, Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.

@item
Richard Stallman, for writing GNU.
@end itemize

This project would not have been possible without the GNU software used
in and to produce Octave.

@node How You Can Contribute to Octave
@unnumberedsec How You Can Contribute to Octave
@cindex contributing to Octave
@cindex funding Octave development

There are a number of ways that you can contribute to help make Octave a
better system.  Perhaps the most important way to contribute is to write
high-quality code for solving new problems, and to make your code freely
available for others to use.  @xref{Contributing Guidelines}, for detailed 
information on contributing new code.

If you find Octave useful, consider providing additional funding to
continue its development.  Even a modest amount of additional funding
could make a significant difference in the amount of time that is
available for development and support.

Donations supporting Octave development may be made on the web at
@url{https://my.fsf.org/donate/working-together/octave}.  These
donations also help to support the Free Software Foundation

If you'd prefer to pay by check or money order, you can do so by sending
a check to the FSF at the following address:

@quotation
Free Software Foundation@*
51 Franklin Street, Suite 500@*
Boston, MA 02110-1335@*
USA
@end quotation

@noindent
If you pay by check, please be sure to write ``GNU Octave'' in the memo
field of your check.

If you cannot provide funding or contribute code, you can still help
make Octave better and more reliable by reporting any bugs you find and
by offering suggestions for ways to improve Octave.  @xref{Trouble}, for
tips on how to write useful bug reports.

@node Distribution
@unnumberedsec Distribution
@cindex distribution of Octave

Octave is @dfn{free} software.  This means that everyone is free to
use it and free to redistribute it on certain conditions.  Octave 
is not, however, in the public domain.  It is copyrighted and there are
restrictions on its distribution, but the restrictions are designed to 
ensure that others will have the same freedom to use and redistribute 
Octave that you have.  The precise conditions can be found in the 
GNU General Public License that comes with Octave and that also appears 
in @ref{Copying}.

To download a copy of Octave, please visit
@url{http://www.octave.org/download.html}.

@end ifclear