Putting the Wolfram Language (and Mathematica) On Every Raspberry Pi
An anonymous reader writes "Working with the Raspberry Pi Foundation, effective immediately, there's a pilot release of the Wolfram Language — as well as Mathematica—that will soon be bundled as part of the standard system software for every Raspberry Pi computer. Quite soon the Wolfram Language is going to start showing up in lots of places, notably on the web and in the cloud."
lol no. It's far more likely that this language will be ignored by practically everyone. Remember Arc?
Why? I'm sure it's great, but...
I'll believe it when I see it here.
http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html
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Isn't the web a "cloud" in of itself?
Why not just release Mathematica for the home users too? There are hundreds of millions of potential users out there who would love to have Mathematica for non-commercial use on their home computers. It would benefit Wolfram tremendously to have such a huge user base that knows his software, instead of just a fraction of anoraks that happen to work in universities or as engineers.
If it's the full Mathematica on Pi, though, I'd probably have to buy one just for that. The home version is several hundred bucks, which is too much for something that I'd just be puttering around with.
Raspberry Pi comes with no operating system. There are a number of Linux builds, including the recommended Debian build, which could be made to include the free Raspberry Pi version of the Wolfram Language and Mathmatica. To claim "every Raspberry Pi" is a bit hyperbolic.
Table-ized A.I.
The Guess Who Clap for the Wolfman (Dutch T.V.)
Wolfram is so desperate to make his abortion of a programming language be popular that he needs to borrow from the trendiness of the Raspberry Pi.
An offer of over $300 in value! Get yours now!
* Based on purchase of a Model B from direct authorized sellers. Does not include shipping or purchase at authorized resellers. Must be run from a Raspbery Pi computer board. Storage, display, keyboard, mouse, and power supply not included. Model A does not include Ethernet.
--
# Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
$Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
I've only been waiting 20 years for someone to finally get 'round to implementing DWIM. It's a remarkably powerful machine instruction, but sadly missing from every single language thus far...
Just in case you thought things might have changed:
As with Wolfram|Alpha on the web, the Wolfram Language (and Mathematica) on the Raspberry Pi are going to be free for anyone to use for personal purposes. (There’s also going to be a licensing mechanism for commercial uses, other Linux ARM systems, and so on.)
I give the RaspberryPi folks credit for making amazing and fun toy for children (that turns out to actually be a quite powerful and useful system for all ages, but shhhh, don't tell the kids! :-). I dearly wish that more of the RaspberryPI system could be Open Hardware, and love the fact that schoolchildren are getting their hands on their own computer that runs FOSS that they can program and tinker with and invent and dream.
But I dearly hope that the Foundation folks say "Thanks but no thanks" to this offer of crippleware. The platform should remain open to all, and putting something like this in a default install will perpetuate a system of haves and have-nots. If Wolfram wants to market this independently, then that is their perogative, but educational tools given to kids should be reuse- and remix-friendly.
coding is life
STEVE JOBS: A FEW MEMORIES As Mathematica was being developed, we showed it to Steve Jobs quite often. He always claimed he didn"t understand the math of it (though I later learned from a good friend of mine who had known Steve in high school that Steve had definitely taken at least one calculus course). But he made all sorts of make it simpler" suggestions about the interface and the documentation.
as i read this, said "language" is already available immediately, as i assume it's as open source as the raspy itself.
can someone point me to the source, please - i'd like to know what this is about, and the official site is acting very coy.
judging from all the ad hominem reactions, it certainly seems to have set some kind of cat amongst the pigeons, around here..
-- be aLert, your country needs Lerts.
You are full of crap. Home edition existed for last 3-4 years if not longer. $300 from your pocket, all it takes.
Unless you mean the boot-loader firmware running in the graphics hardware. After that you have a kernel of you choice and a RPi Linux distro (or something else that runs on it) of your choice.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Which is exactly what he said, so how is that full of crap? $300 is too much for something he'd just putter around with.
I was about dispute an earlier post but then ran
time factor 18014398777917439
on both a real Pi and a whole machine Qemu pi on a 2.5Ghz Intel machine. The real Pi was 3-4 seconds faster. A Qemu Pi may be faster if you didn't emulate the whole machine and just translated the binary though...
Yet another language we don't need...
You fucking lot sound like medieval theologians, debating how many angels, etc....
Agreed, the Pi doesn't "bundle" an OS and you're free to implement or install whatever OS you desire. But if you're not using it as a cheapo media server, then you'll most likely have installed the latest version of Raspbian on your memory card, either as the solo image or through the "Noob" installer, and the Raspbian image now includes Mathemarica/Wolfram. I should imagine that the semanticist in your crabby little soul will continue to insist that Mathematica/Wolfram is "bundled" with Raspbian and not the Pi but seeing as Raspbian is running on a Pi, and not anything else, then its just as valid to say its bundled on the Pi.
What IS it with the Slashdot crowd? The mere mention of the Raspberry Pi brings out the various anti-zealots in force, foaming at the mouth with cries of "shill", "Stinky Broadcomm" and "binary blob", ever eager to point out that "it isn't open at all" and that you can get a better SBC for little more than two or three times the price of the Pi. Don't you plonkers just buy whatever they need to get the job done, or does it have to tick all your ideological boxes too, even if you don't actually require access to feature X?
Oh well, they've managed to flog 2 million of the little beasties, so they must be doing SOMETHING right!
I'm pretty sure his ego can't fit in 512 mb.
If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.