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The software also includes reference interval estimation, [9] meta-analysis and sample size calculations. The first DOS version of MedCalc was released in April 1993 and the first version for Windows was available in November 1996.
MedCalc – for biomedical sciences; Microfit – econometrics package, time series; Minitab – general statistics package; MLwiN – multilevel models (free to UK academics) Nacsport Video Analysis Software – software for analysing sports and obtaining statistical intelligence; NAG Numerical Library – comprehensive math and statistics library
Ooms, Marius (2009). "Trends in Applied Econometrics Software Development 1985–2008: An Analysis of Journal of Applied Econometrics Research Articles, Software Reviews, Data and Code". Palgrave Handbook of Econometrics. Vol. 2: Applied Econometrics. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1321–1348. ISBN 978-1-4039-1800-0. Renfro, Charles G. (2004).
MDCalc is a free online medical reference for healthcare professionals that provides point-of-care clinical decision-support tools, including medical calculators, scoring systems, and algorithms. [1]
Today, 3D-Calc software is Freeware ("Public domain without source code") and can be downloaded freely. [1] In 1992–1993, it was ported to MS-DOS to serve as the basis of a new statistics software package MedCalc. [1]
There are a few reviews of free statistical software. There were two reviews in journals (but not peer reviewed), one by Zhu and Kuljaca [26] and another article by Grant that included mainly a brief review of R. [27] Zhu and Kuljaca outlined some useful characteristics of software, such as ease of use, having a number of statistical procedures and ability to develop new procedures.
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See Analyse-it, MedCalc, NCSS, GraphPad Prism, R, StatsDirect, or JASP for software providing Bland–Altman plots. Bland–Altman plots are extensively used to evaluate the agreement among two different instruments or two measurements techniques.