Not sure, could have to do with early marketing in the 80s - we all know academia likes to stay on a path regardless of new developments. Could be as simple as "Mathematica" has math in its name and was developed by a…
:/ yeah, so does youtube and pandora now - 'tis the way of the (commercial) world.
Matlab might be more popular in engineering, but Mathematica is pretty pervasive world wide in math and physics especially
have you tried the free version on the cloud? www.wolfram.com/development-platform/ definitely recommend playing around.
check out demonstrations.wolfram.com too - it's a place you can put manipulations if you want to use them in a class, etc
Not sure, could have to do with early marketing in the 80s - we all know academia likes to stay on a path regardless of new developments. Could be as simple as "Mathematica" has math in its name and was developed by a…
:/ yeah, so does youtube and pandora now - 'tis the way of the (commercial) world.
Matlab might be more popular in engineering, but Mathematica is pretty pervasive world wide in math and physics especially
have you tried the free version on the cloud? www.wolfram.com/development-platform/ definitely recommend playing around.
check out demonstrations.wolfram.com too - it's a place you can put manipulations if you want to use them in a class, etc