![]() Since Children’s Hospital is a separate entity from UC, installing software purchased from UC on CCHMC owned computers is a violation of that license agreement. However, when purchasing from UC, the license agreement states that the software can be installed only on your personally owned or UC-owned computer and not on machines owned by other institutions. Please make sure you read the license agreement carefully before you use UC software.įaculty and students of UC are eligible to purchase software from UC. In many cases this software is licensed specifically to UC employees only (i.e., people who receive paychecks from UC) or must be run on UC-owned or controlled equipment, making it inaccessible to Cincinnati Children's personnel. It's holding back the field - and few people can see it.UC researchers are served with desktop software by UCIT. As an entrepreneur who has started, led, and sold multiple biotechnology and medical device companies (and who has licensed scores of early-stage biomedical inventions), I myself have rejected opportunities to launch new companies to commercialize software specifically directed towards improving the quality, speed, and efficiency of academic research labs - all because I could not get past the inherent "don't spend money on software" culture of the academic lab. ![]() I hope all of you who do this end up downloading a virus that turns your computer into a child-porn distribution node without making any attempt to conceal your IP address. I do know many (many, many) people in grad school who simply searched for EndNote X4 and GraphPAD Prism cracked versions on bit-torrent. ![]() Attitudes like this are why many of the bioinformatics and data analysis software tools for the life sciences are painfully outdated - because, despite NIH spending nearly $30B per year on biomedical research funding, PIs are too cheap to buy quality software tools (yet will pay for unbelievably overpriced crap from the Fisher Catalog). However, in grad school it was so commonly done that PI's would ask for their grad students to install that 'special edition' version on their new laptops, and pretend they didn't know it was pirated. Where I am now, pirating software would result in serious disciplinary action. They may do it, but again, do not purchase with your own out of pocket money! If it's needed as part of your work, it shouldn't be any different than any other lab supply/reagent.Įndnote is much larger and more corporate structured, they're less likely to give a personal discount but you can try that too.Īlthough I wouldn't officially suggest it, I do know many (many, many) people in grad school who simply searched for EndNote X4 and GraphPAD Prism cracked versions on bit-torrent. It's a small company, and I've emailed them a few times over the years. ![]() ![]() You could try emailing GraphPAD Prism and asking if they'd give you an even more discounted license. A lot of universities don't provide free licenses for their students for these (I was at UCLA, and they didn't either!). If it comes to making figures, and/or doing the stats, simply ask a co-author or the PI to do it on Prism, since you don't have that software. If it's a paper you're collaborating on, and multiple people are writing/editing it, it's likely someone will get annoyed enough that your PI will get you EndNote (assuming that's what the other people use). Never pay for software out of pocket! If it's lab related, and your PI won't purchase it using lab funds, simply use the freeware alternatives. ![]()
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