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Launching Version 13.1 of Wolfram Language & Mathematica ??????

Stephen Wolfram

🙀 The Epic Continues… Last week it was 34 years since the original launch of Mathematica and what’s now the Wolfram Language. From the very beginning of Mathematica and the Wolfram Language we’ve had the concept of listability: if you add two lists, for example, their corresponding elements will be added: &#10005.

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The Story Continues: Announcing Version 14 of Wolfram Language and Mathematica

Stephen Wolfram

of Wolfram Language and Mathematica is available immediately both on the desktop and in the cloud. of Wolfram Language and Mathematica. of Wolfram Language and Mathematica. One category concerns the structure of answers. Version 14.0 See also more detailed information on Version 13.1 , Version 13.2 and Version 13.3.

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Will AIs Take All Our Jobs and End Human History—or Not? Well, It’s Complicated…

Stephen Wolfram

Not to mention the need for prompt engineers (a job category that just didn’t exist until a few months ago), and what amount to AI wranglers, AI psychologists, etc. But with a bit of effort, it’s possible to more or less match things up—at least if one aggregates into large enough categories. all that mass-customized text.

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The Physicalization of Metamathematics and Its Implications for the Foundations of Mathematics

Stephen Wolfram

But what’s emerged over the past century or so—with particular clarity in Mathematica and the Wolfram Language —is that there is in fact a rather simple and general representation that works remarkably well: a representation in which everything is a symbolic expression. A notable example is homotopy type theory.

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Charting a Course for “Complexity”: Metamodeling, Ruliology and More

Stephen Wolfram

It wasn’t something universities were teaching; it wasn’t something that was a category for funding. The result was Mathematica (and now the Wolfram Language), as well as Wolfram Research. But somehow everything moved very slowly. Despite my efforts, complex systems research wasn’t a thing yet. I was impatient to have it happen.