I am going to try this semester also. Thanks for paving the way. :-) On Sat, Dec 20, 2014 at 5:48 PM, John Kitchin wrote: > All of the code is here: > https://github.com/jkitchin/jmax/tree/master/techela > > and there is some documentation in the README. > > I am not sure how much work it would take to try it yourself though. You > need to setup a gitolite server (that is described in the README), and > more importantly figure out how to get this in your student's hands. For > windows users, they can just clone jmax, and it should run out of the > box (it has an emacs in it). > > "Marvin M. Doyley" writes: > > > Very cool indeed. > > I would love to try this for a small course that I will be teaching in > the spring semester. > > Is your code available? > > Cheers, > > M > > Sent from my iPad > > > > -- > ----------------------------------- > John Kitchin > Professor > Doherty Hall A207F > Department of Chemical Engineering > Carnegie Mellon University > Pittsburgh, PA 15213 > 412-268-7803 > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu > > -- Evan Misshula Doctoral Student (Criminal Justice) City University of New York "The purpose of computing is insight, not numbers" ~ John Hamming "Instruction does much, but encouragement does everything." Johann Von Goethe EvanMisshula.github.io