Wolfram Research

Wolfram Research, Inc.
Private
Industry Computer software, Publishing, Research and Development
Founded 1987 (1987)
Founder Stephen Wolfram, Theodore Gray
Headquarters Champaign, Illinois (worldwide headquarters)
Oxfordshire, UK
Tokyo, Japan
with additional locations in Somerville, Massachusetts and Paris, France.
Key people

President & CEO, Stephen Wolfram

Director of Strategic Development & Wolfram Research Europe Limited CEO, Conrad Wolfram
Products Mathematica, Wolfram Workbench, gridMathematica, webMathematica, Wolfram Alpha, SystemModeler
Owner Privately held
Number of employees
~700
Divisions Wolfram Media Inc., Wolfram Research Europe Ltd. in the United Kingdom, Wolfram Research Asia Ltd. in Japan and Wolfram Research South America in Peru.
Website wolfram.com

Coordinates: 40°05′50″N 88°14′44″W / 40.097128°N 88.245690°W / 40.097128; -88.245690

Wolfram Research is a private company that creates computational technology. Wolfram's flagship product is the technical computing program Mathematica, first released on June 23, 1988. Wolfram Research founder Stephen Wolfram is the CEO.

The company launched Wolfram Alpha, an answer engine on 16 May 2009. It brings a new approach to knowledge generation and acquisition that involves large amounts of curated computable data in addition to semantic indexing of text.[1]

Wolfram Research acquired MathCore Engineering AB on March 30, 2011.[2]

On July 21, 2011 Wolfram Research launched the Computable Document Format (CDF). CDF is an electronic document format[3] designed to allow easy authoring[4] of dynamically generated interactive content.

In June 2014, Wolfram Research officially introduced the Wolfram Language as a new general multi-paradigm programming language.[5] It is the primary programming language used in Mathematica.[6]

Other products include Wolfram SystemModeler, Wolfram Workbench,[7] gridMathematica, Wolfram Finance Platform,[8]webMathematica, the Wolfram Development Platform,[9] and the Wolfram Programming Lab.[10]

Wolfram Research served as the mathematical consultant for the CBS television series Numb3rs, a show about the mathematical aspects of crime-solving.[11]

Publishing

Wolfram Research publishes several free websites including the MathWorld and ScienceWorld encyclopedias. ScienceWorld, which launched in 2002, is divided into sites on chemistry, physics, astronomy and scientific biography.[12] In 2005, the physics site was deemed a "valuable resource" by American Scientist magazine.[13] However, by 2009, the astronomy site was said to suffer from outdated information, incomplete articles and link rot.[14]

The Wolfram Demonstrations Project is a collaborative site hosting interactive technical demonstrations powered by a free Mathematica Player runtime.

Wolfram Research publishes The Mathematica Journal.[15] Wolfram has also published several books via Wolfram Media, Wolfram's publishing arm.[16][17]

Wolfram Research has organized three Wolfram Science conferences in Boston, MA, Washington, D.C. and Burlington, VT in the United States in the years 2003, 2006 and 2007 respectively. Two other independent NKS Midwest conferences have taken place at the Indiana University, Bloomington in 2005 and 2008. Other independent workshops related to NKS research have also been organized overseas, such as JOUAL (Just One Universal Algorithm) at the CNR in Pisa, Italy in 2009.

Wolfram Research hosts the yearly Wolfram Technology Conference in Champaign, IL.[18] During this three-day conference, developers discuss the latest Wolfram technologies for mobile devices, cloud computing, interactive deployment, and more.

Wolfram Research also hosts the annual Wolfram Data Summit, a high-level gathering of innovators in data science.[19]

They are experimenting with electronic textbook creation.[20]

See also

Wikinews has related news: Wolfram Research’s new product Alpha to compete with Google and Wikipedia

References

  1. Johnson, Bobbie (2009-03-09). "British search engine 'could rival Google'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  2. Wolfram, Stephen. "Launching a New Era in Large-Scale Systems Modeling".
  3. Wolfram Alpha Creator plans to delete the PDF The Telegraph (UK)
  4. Wolfram makes data interactive PC World
  5. "Wolfram Language reference page". reference.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
  6. Slate's article Stephen Wolfram's New Programming Language: He Can Make The World Computable, March 6, 2014. Retrieved on 2014-05-14.
  7. "Wolfram Workbench: State-of-the-Art Integrated Development Environment". www.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  8. "Wolfram Finance Platform: Ultimate Financial Computation Environment". www.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  9. "Wolfram Development Platform: Introducing a Programming Revolution". www.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  10. "Wolfram Programming Lab: Computational Thinking Starts Here". www.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  11. "Numb3rs 307: Blackout". Cornell University. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  12. W., Weisstein, Eric. "ScienceWorld FAQ". scienceworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  13. "American Scientist Online - Eric Weisstein's World of Physics". 2005-03-19. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  14. "Eric Weissteins's World of Astronomy". Reference Reviews. 24 (4): 32–33. 2010-05-04. ISSN 0950-4125. doi:10.1108/09504121011045728.
  15. The Mathematica Journal official site.
  16. Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science sets a new standard in more ways than one by Charlotte Abbott, Publishers Weekly, 6/24/2002
  17. "Wolfram Media: Titles". www.wolfram-media.com. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  18. "Wolfram Technology Conference 2016".
  19. "Wolfram Data Summit 2016: Trends & Innovations in the Universe of Data". www.wolframdatasummit.org. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  20. Eisenberg, Anne (17 December 2011). "Online Textbooks Aim to Make Science Leap From the Page". The New York Times.
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