- Multisim for Mac
- Multisim for Mac OS X: Best alternatives Our editors hand-picked the best Mac alternatives to Multisim, go ahead and check them out, rate them, or add new ones you find fitting.
- MacSpice Free
- Schematics Lite Free
- Volta Free
- qucs Free
- MI-SUGAR c Free
- Know of any alternatives we haven’t found yet?
- Multisim ��� mac os
- Explore Multisim™ for Education Features
- Engage Students With Simulation and Analysis
- Learn Anywhere With Multisim Live™ Integration
- Simulate and Deploy Digital Logic to FPGA
- What Can You Do With Multisim™ for Education?
- Mac version of MultiSim or a similar Mac alternative?
- terriyaki
- TDM21
- terriyaki
- mduser63
- -::ubermann::-
- mduser63
- -::ubermann::-
- mduser63
- janiegirl
- Zetto
- LtRammstein
- Saladinos
- macforumrider
- dizzin
- uanuglyfool
- 22Hertz
- farhadtheruler
- MAC-PRO-DEMON
- farhadtheruler
- easybe
- SilentWarrior
- KiwiLee
- kgiann78
Multisim for Mac
Multisim by National Instruments Corporation is a well-known piece of software that allows users to design and analyze electronic circuits. Sadly, there is no version of Multisim for Mac available on the market, so, you will have to use other applications to design your circuits. Here are some alternatives to Multisim for Mac.
Multisim for Mac OS X: Best alternatives Our editors hand-picked the best Mac alternatives to Multisim, go ahead and check them out, rate them, or add new ones you find fitting.
MacSpice Free
MacSpice is an electronic circuit simulator. Circuit simulation is a way of building and testing virtual models of electronic devices. It is usually cheaper and quicker to simulate a design than to build a prototype.
Schematics Lite Free
McCAD Schematics Lite (Scholastic Edition) is a sophisticated engineering database management system that allows the electronic designer to easily create and revise electronic circuit designs (digital or analog).
Volta Free
Use Volta to design analog circuits. Volta features schematic editing, an expandable component library, SPICE simulation, graph plotting and support for creating sub-circuits.
qucs Free
Qucs is an integrated circuit simulator which means you are able to setup a circuit with a graphical user interface (GUI) and simulate the large-signal, small-signal and noise behaviour of the circuit.
MI-SUGAR c Free
MI-SUGAR (pronounced «my sugar») is a tool for designing analog electronic circuits. It is built for Mac OS X 10.4 and was first distributed under the MacInit brand.
Circuit Wizard by New Wave Concepts Limited is a piece of software that can help you design.
PSpice by Cadence Design Systems, Inc is a native analog and mixed-signal circuit simulator.
Digital Works by OpenCart Mecanique is an application that can help you design your digital logic.
sPlan by ABACOM is a piece of software that can help you design electrical circuit diagrams.
PCB Wizard by New Wave Concepts Limited is a piece of software that will help you design printed.
Know of any alternatives we haven’t found yet?
Feel free to add any alternative to Multisim for Mac that you know of.
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Multisim ��� mac os
Are you a student who needs Multisim™ software?
What Is Multisim™ for Education?
Multisim™ for Education is circuits teaching application software for analog, digital, and power electronics courses and laboratories. Visualize circuits and reinforce theory with simulated instruments, advanced analyses, and thousands of interactive components.
Explore Multisim™ for Education Features
Developed with educators, Multisim™ for Education helps students easily visualize and understand the behavior of electronics with 30+ intuitive simulated instruments, 20+ easy-to-configure analyses, and interactive components that are proven to reinforce theory and prepare students for authentic design challenges. Multisim™ software users with an active Standard Service Program (SSP) membership are eligible to upgrade.
Engage Students With Simulation and Analysis
Students can easily visualize and analyze circuits with simulated instruments, advanced analyses, and thousands of components to reinforce circuit theory.
Learn Anywhere With Multisim Live™ Integration
This online, touch-optimized feature can export right to Multisim™, so students can create, simulate, and share circuits wherever they are, on any device.
Simulate and Deploy Digital Logic to FPGA
Multisim™ makes it easy to deploy digital logic to any Digilent FPGA device, which prepares students to learn Verilog or VHDL in future coursework.
What Can You Do With Multisim™ for Education?
Multisim™ software empowers educators to teach circuits in a way that maximizes student learning and real-world preparedness. Explore the subjects below to see how Multisim™ can improve your program.
Simulated benchtop instruments and advanced analyses in Multisim™ lend a thorough understanding of circuit behavior, which reinforces textbook theory.
As a learning tool, Multisim™ connects abstract theory to concrete signals through intuitive design, interactive simulation, and seamless hardware integration.
Multisim™ embraces the need to take a hands-on approach to engineering education.
Multisim™ goes beyond standard SPICE simulation to include an extensive digital component library that you can simulate and deploy to any Digilent FPGA device.
Standard Service Program
Every purchase includes a renewable, one-year membership to the SSP for software. SSP membership includes the following features:
- Live phone and email technical support from local, degreed engineers
- Automatic version updates to Multisim™ and Ultiboard™ 1
- 24/7 access to selected online training and virtual demonstrations
- Access to historical versions in case you need to share code with your team
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Mac version of MultiSim or a similar Mac alternative?
terriyaki
macrumors 6502a
Does anyone know if there is a Mac version of MultiSim? It’s an electronic circuit simulator program.. figured if there were Maple alternatives there’d be some electronics program alternatives.
Short of a Mac version do you guys know if there would be any similar programs for OS X?
Please, please, please let there be some alternatives. I really don’t want to install VPC on my iBook.
TDM21
macrumors 6502a
If anyone finds one, I am interested as well.
I have used MultiSim in VPC before. After 3 D-latches and 1 clock chip, along with a 7 segment LED, I brought VPC to a screeching halt. The power just wasn’t there to simulate the circuit.
terriyaki
macrumors 6502a
Anyone out there have any experience using these? I’ve installed them both and experimented with them a bit but I’m still unfamiliar with them. Any comments about these programs or recommendations for other programs would be really helpful.
Thanks in advance.
mduser63
macrumors 68040
Anyone out there have any experience using these? I’ve installed them both and experimented with them a bit but I’m still unfamiliar with them. Any comments about these programs or recommendations for other programs would be really helpful.
Thanks in advance.
I first installed MI-SUGAR quite a while back. Couldn’t really get it to work, so I kind of forgot about it and just continued to use PSpice on my PC. I revisited MI-SUGAR a couple months back and actually spent an hour or so figuring it out, and I’ve grown to really like it. It can definitely be improved, but right now its only version 0.57, and for being relatively unfinished, it’s very impressive. Haven’t tried QUCS, I just found out about it the other day.
I’m actually just starting to learn Objective-C and planning to learn Cocoa once I get Objective-C down OK. The thing that motivated me to do that is a desire to improve MI-SUGAR (besides having wanted to learn to program for a long time).
If you’re looking for Verilog software, there’s a program out there called IVIonOSX or something similar. It’s really not well finished, but I have successfully used it in combination with the Icarus open source command line Verilog compiler to simulate somewhat complex Verilog designs. I haven’t found a schematic->Verilog app like you can get for the PC, but I really don’t feel that such a thing is particularly useful. Verilog is only really powerful when you write it in text form like you’d write a program.
-::ubermann::-
macrumors regular
mduser63
macrumors 68040
MI-SUGAR is open source, so it does still exist, it just seems that the original author no longer offers it on his site. I’d be happy to upload a copy (including source-code) if anyone wants it. As for QUCS, I could never get it to launch either. MI-SUGAR on the other hand actually works, and I’ve successfully used it to complete quite a few assignments for which PSpice was «required».
EDIT: Looks like you have to have the QT runtimes installed for QUCS. that may be the problem.
EDIT2: Yep, after installing Qt-Mac (found here), QUCS launches fine, and it looks pretty promising. I don’t have much of a need for SPICE-type simulation this year (focusing on VLSI and advanced electromagnetics stuff right now), but if I did, I’d definitely try to figure out how to use QUCS effectively.
-::ubermann::-
macrumors regular
MI-SUGAR is open source, so it does still exist, it just seems that the original author no longer offers it on his site. I’d be happy to upload a copy (including source-code) if anyone wants it. As for QUCS, I could never get it to launch either. MI-SUGAR on the other hand actually works, and I’ve successfully used it to complete quite a few assignments for which PSpice was «required».
EDIT: Looks like you have to have the QT runtimes installed for QUCS. that may be the problem.
EDIT2: Yep, after installing Qt-Mac (found here), QUCS launches fine, and it looks pretty promising. I don’t have much of a need for SPICE-type simulation this year (focusing on VLSI and advanced electromagnetics stuff right now), but if I did, I’d definitely try to figure out how to use QUCS effectively.
mduser63
macrumors 68040
No, I’d have to put it on my own web space. Which I suppose I’ll do now. I’m including both the application itself and the source code in the same zip file. The app is Universal. It’s written in Objective-C/Cocoa except for the GNUCap and SPICE backends, and is provided as an XCode project. I have a longterm goal of sort of reviving the project if I can because it’s particularly useful to me, and I kind of think that was the author’s intent when he open-sourced it.
Anyway, download it here (8 MB).
Note to people finding this thread via search in the future: That link will almost certainly be dead within a few weeks when I do my periodic cleaning of my webserver. If you need/want MI-SUGAR, PM me and I can probably send it to you again.
janiegirl
macrumors newbie
Thanks for posting MI SUGAR
Thanks for posting MI SUGAR! I’ve been looking for it as well.
Zetto
macrumors newbie
Combo Simulation/Layout/Schematic Capture
QUCS (schematic and simulation not SPICE) OSX packages
http://naranja.umh.es/
gEDA (schematic, netlist, simulation, pcb) fink .info files for OSX
http://www.ghz.cc/charles/fink/
MI-SUGAR (schematic and simulation) OSX 1.3 Carbon
http://www.macinit.com/misugar/
PCB Layout Software
LtRammstein
macrumors 6502a
Which of these programs is closer to a Xilinx environment?
Saladinos
macrumors 68000
macforumrider
macrumors newbie
No, I’d have to put it on my own web space. Which I suppose I’ll do now. I’m including both the application itself and the source code in the same zip file. The app is Universal. It’s written in Objective-C/Cocoa except for the GNUCap and SPICE backends, and is provided as an XCode project. I have a longterm goal of sort of reviving the project if I can because it’s particularly useful to me, and I kind of think that was the author’s intent when he open-sourced it.
Anyway, download it here (8 MB).
Note to people finding this thread via search in the future: That link will almost certainly be dead within a few weeks when I do my periodic cleaning of my webserver. If you need/want MI-SUGAR, PM me and I can probably send it to you again.
you are very thoughtful, could you post this again? I am new to macs and would like a spice program to use here.
dizzin
macrumors newbie
could you post mi sugar and the other programs again? or send them to me it is only 8 mb that not to much to email.
anyway thanks
uanuglyfool
macrumors regular
Can anyone send me a copy of MI Sugar
22Hertz
macrumors regular
I recently found Mi Sugar through a Google search.
You may also want to check out MacSpice. I haven’t had a chance to play with it yet so I don’t know how it compares to the other spice’s out there.
farhadtheruler
macrumors newbie
i would also appreciate if you could post MI-SUGAR again..
thnx
MAC-PRO-DEMON
macrumors 6502a
MacSpice seems a pretty good alternative to MI-Sugar.. but I don’t really have anything advanced enough to run through it.
farhadtheruler
macrumors newbie
i looked at MacSpice, but i dont think it does what i need it to, plus, i can’t use the command interface
i am looking for something that would enable me to use IC chips (7476N, 7432. )
is there a program that does that?
easybe
macrumors newbie
SilentWarrior
macrumors newbie
I tryed mi-sugar but all i get is a textbox with commands (i just started messing around with eletronics).
I wanted something that could output this, or similar :
So you could actually experiment stuff and see how things work in a more hands-on approach.
ftw
KiwiLee
macrumors member
kgiann78
macrumors newbie
I first installed MI-SUGAR quite a while back. Couldn’t really get it to work, so I kind of forgot about it and just continued to use PSpice on my PC. I revisited MI-SUGAR a couple months back and actually spent an hour or so figuring it out, and I’ve grown to really like it. It can definitely be improved, but right now its only version 0.57, and for being relatively unfinished, it’s very impressive. Haven’t tried QUCS, I just found out about it the other day.
I’m actually just starting to learn Objective-C and planning to learn Cocoa once I get Objective-C down OK. The thing that motivated me to do that is a desire to improve MI-SUGAR (besides having wanted to learn to program for a long time).
If you’re looking for Verilog software, there’s a program out there called IVIonOSX or something similar. It’s really not well finished, but I have successfully used it in combination with the Icarus open source command line Verilog compiler to simulate somewhat complex Verilog designs. I haven’t found a schematic->Verilog app like you can get for the PC, but I really don’t feel that such a thing is particularly useful. Verilog is only really powerful when you write it in text form like you’d write a program.
Hey mduser63, have you seen kulfx.com? Somebody took your words and is trying to evolve mi-sugar! It’s new name will be Volta. Tell me that is you that is working on this project.
@KiwiLee this should be from pSpice (I guess only available for Windows. )
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