A Dramatic New Product Nearly 20 Years after the Original
May 1, 2007--For the second time in under 20 years,
Wolfram Research is bringing a revolution to computing. The first was Mathematica 1.0 in 1988. Today's is
Mathematica 6--in many respects a completely new product, one with several hundred additional groundbreaking technologies developed over more than a decade at Wolfram Research.
"In compatibility terms,
Mathematica 6 is an upgrade. In capability terms, this is a major new product," said Stephen Wolfram, CEO of
Wolfram Research. "Mathematica's been reinvented."
Mathematica 6 takes technical computing to a new level: more tightly bound, more natural, and more automated, applicable to a far wider range of areas than ever before. Central to this achievement is "instant interactivity"--taking models, simulations, computations, or just about any concepts and turning them into fully interactive applications, sometimes within seconds. This new way of working drastically improves innovation--the process of transforming ideas into highly optimized results."In 1988,
Mathematica 6 transformed scientific computing from something you hire a programmer to do into something you can just do yourself. In 2007, we are doing the same for live interactive interface creation," said Theodore Gray, director of user interface technology. "No other system comes close to providing this kind of nimble, fluid environment for creating dynamic interactive interfaces, which, because of the underlying power of
Mathematica, often turn out to have astonishing depth and variety."
It's not just for instant development that
Mathematica 6 is newly optimized. The integrated development environment (IDE), allied with Mathematica's advanced programming language and world-leading computational capabilities, makes it ideal for the opposite end of the spectrum--infrastructure development--and everything in between.
"It's a unique facet of
Mathematica 6 that it's so appropriate at all scales: from one-off mini-applications through large-scale infrastructure projects," said Tom Wickham-Jones, director of kernel technology. "Whenever you think of doing technical development, think of Mathematica 6."
"These days, the main hurdle to using
Mathematica in technical work is thinking of using it--its scope is wider than almost anyone imagines," added Conrad Wolfram, director of strategic and international development.
Nearly a thousand new computational and interface features enhance
Mathematica 6's revolutionary new approach. Several of these would individually classify Version 6 as a major release, and some broaden
Mathematica to encompass the capabilities of whole competing products.
Key new features include:
- Dynamic interactivity, allowing sophisticated interactive interfaces to be created from single lines of input
- High-impact adaptive visualization for automated creation of high-fidelity function and data graphics
- Language for data integration, including automatic integration of hundreds of standard data formats
- Load-on-demand curated data for math, physics, chemistry, finance, geography, linguistics, and more
- Symbolic interface construction for immediate creation of arbitrary interfaces from simple programs
- Automated computational aesthetics, with algorithmic optimization for visual presentation
- Unification of active graphics and controls with flowing text and input
Mathematica 6 for Students (Student Pricing)
Mathematica 6 Academic Pro (K-12/Higher Ed)
Mathematica 6 for the Classroom (K-12/Higher Ed)
Mathematica CalcCenter 3 (K-12/Higher Ed)
Mathematica CalcCenter 3 (Student Pricing)
Mathematica Fuzzy Logic 2 (Academic Pricing)
Mathematica CalcCenter 3 (K-12/Higher Ed)
Mathematica CalcCenter 3 (Student Pricing)
Mathematica Fuzzy Logic 2 (Academic Pricing)
Mathematica Personal Grid Edition 5.2 (Academic Pricing)