Minitab 17: think Mini Cooper, not Minnie Mouse

As it has been 3 or 4 years since the previous version, the new release of Minitab 17 statistical package is surely cause for rejoicing, merriment, and an extra biscuit with a strong cup of tea.

At one of the centres where I work, the data analysts sit at the same lunch table, but are known by their packages, the Stata people, the SAS person, the R person, the SPSS person and so on. No Minitab person as yet, but maybe there should be. Not only for its easy to use graphics, mentioned in a previous post, but for its all round interface, programmability (Minitab syntax looks a little like that great Kemeny-Kurtz language from 1964 Dartmouth College, BASIC, but more powerful), and a few new features (Poisson regression for relative risks & counted data, although alas no negative binomial regression for trickier counted data), and even better graphics.

Bubble plots, Outlier tests, and the Box-Cox transformation (another great collaboration from 1964), Minitab was also one of the first packages to include Exploratory Data Analysis (e.g. box plots and smoothed regression), for when the data are about as well-behaved as the next door neighbours strung out on espresso coffee mixed with red cordial.

Not as much cachet for when the R and SAS programmers come a-swaggering in, but still worth recommending for those who may not be getting as much as they should be out of SPSS, particularly for graphics, yet find the other packages a little too high to climb.

http://www.minitab.com/en-us/

SecretSource: of Minitab and Dataviz

When the goers go and the stayers stay, when shirts loosen and tattoos glisten, it’s time for the statisticians and the miners and the data scientists to talk, and walk, Big Iron.

R. S-Plus. SAS. Tableau. Stata. GnuPlot. Mondrian. DataDesk. Minitab.   MINITAB?????? Okay, we’ll leave the others to get back to their arm wrasslin’, but if you want to produce high quality graphs, simply, readily and quickly, then Minitab could be for you.

A commercialized version of Omnitab, Minitab appeared in Philadelphia in 1972 and has long been associated with students learning stats, but also now with business, industrial and medical/health quality management and six sigma, etc. There’s some  other real ‘rough and tumble’ applications involving Minitab – DR Helsell’s ‘Statistics for Censored Environmental Data using Minitab and R’ (Wiley 2012), for instance.

IBM SPSS and Microsoft Excel can produce good graphs (‘good’ in the ‘good sense’ of John Tukey , Edward Tufte, William Cleveland, Howard Wainer, Stephen Few & Nathan Yau etc etc), with the soft pedal down and ‘caution switches’ on, but Minitab is probably going to be easier.

For example, the Statistical Consulting Centre at the University of Melbourne uses Minitab for most of its graphs (R for the trickiest ones). As well as general short courses on Minitab, R, SPSS and GenStat there’s a one day course in Minitab graphics in November, which I’ve done and can recommend.

More details on the Producing Excellent Graphics Simply (PEGS) course using Minitab at Melbourne are at

http://www.scc.ms.unimelb.edu.au/pegs.html

student and academic pricing for Minitab is at http://onthehub.com/

What, I wonder, would Florence Nightingale have used for graphic software if she was alive today???