Introducing Mathematica, Stephen Wolfram

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  • Опубликовано: 2 мар 2017
  • In this 1989 video presentation, Mathematica (TM) creator Stephen Wolfram demonstrates his award winning mathematics software. Wolfram demonstrates numerical calculations, algebraic calculation and graphical renderings. He concludes with a discussion of programming.
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Комментарии • 137

  • @markkennedy9767
    @markkennedy9767 4 года назад +158

    Pretty impressive that Mathematica could do this back in 1989. Never knew it was that advanced back then. Wolfram is a genius

    • @USGrant21st
      @USGrant21st Год назад +2

      Ask yourself why for 30 years nobody used it. When I just started my PhD, my adviser told me from the outset to start using Matlab and not waste time of the fancy stuff.

    • @TateVanPatten
      @TateVanPatten Год назад +2

      ​@@USGrant21st why do you think?

    • @USGrant21st
      @USGrant21st Год назад +1

      @@TateVanPatten It's pretty useless in practice. I know people used it to write articles with pretty illustration, but that's basically it. Anybody who does math for living doesn't need a primitive tool, it adds nothing, but it takes efforts to use. Those who are in tech field, who develop algorithms, test theories, etc. need Matlab, which does digital, not symbolic calculations.

    • @andreasgadetrading
      @andreasgadetrading 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@USGrant21st You're arrogantly comparing apples with oranges. Entirely different purposes.

    • @USGrant21st
      @USGrant21st 10 месяцев назад

      @@andreasgadetrading comments from an ignoramus like yourself are valuable contributions to discussion 😅 -- not.

  • @NonTwinBrothers
    @NonTwinBrothers 2 года назад +65

    Non-math people will never understand the genius this man always has been

  • @whozz
    @whozz 3 года назад +55

    It's impressive that the wolfram language remained consistent with what we have today, even after 30 years of development.

  • @theb1rd
    @theb1rd 4 года назад +72

    I had no idea Mathematica was this good at version 1.

    • @projectpegasus1297
      @projectpegasus1297 2 года назад +5

      honestly i think i just need a RasPi with mathematica v1 and I'll be able to do literally anything.

    • @AdamsOlympia
      @AdamsOlympia 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@projectpegasus1297 Calculators have come a long way since I was born. ;)

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden 4 года назад +41

    It is amazing how his voice sounds exactly the same today. You couldn't tell the difference between this one and the video he did yesterday. Wow! What a hero! I love this man. And cutie too, who knew? lol

    • @exmodule6323
      @exmodule6323 Год назад +1

      Actually his accent has become noticeably more British. The accent above sounds Mid-Atlantic

  • @NightmareCourtPictures
    @NightmareCourtPictures Год назад +11

    Let’s all pay some respect to Wolframs epic chad beard.

  • @vincei4252
    @vincei4252 2 года назад +9

    Stephen still sounds exactly the same today as I listen to him talk about the future of Arrays in Mathematica on Twitch right now.

  • @johnnisshansen
    @johnnisshansen 2 года назад +16

    He is very clear and even 30+ years ago iMathematica seems pretty adwanced and usefull

  • @cleenlivin
    @cleenlivin 3 года назад +20

    He always interested me. Who gets a PhD from Caltech at 20 and goes on to create such an important computing tool. This had to be a game changer at the time when folks were still using complex computer languages that couldn't come close to this programs flexibility and graphical capabilities.

  • @rakeshmallick9161
    @rakeshmallick9161 4 года назад +35

    I think this is a video from mid 80s, Even with those low power computers it gave impressive results.

    • @deth3021
      @deth3021 3 года назад +4

      Description says 1989

  • @lerdi
    @lerdi 2 года назад +24

    21:32 Calculus
    28:08 Graphics
    39:56 Programming
    51:30 External Interaction

    • @bertsierra
      @bertsierra 2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for that roadmap!

  • @luciengrondin5802
    @luciengrondin5802 3 года назад +18

    29:50 "Nevertheless since I happen to know the PostScript language"
    When a guy says that, you know he's a real computer geek.

    • @cybermodo
      @cybermodo 3 года назад +2

      He sure might be called geek... but then again, he doesn't need to be. He is obviously MATHEMATICIAN, and probably the one specialized in Computer Science - which is legit branch of mathematics department of any university. So, loving mathematics and knowing how to design and code complex software system like Mathematica - it's quite simply his professional field.
      Sure he knows PostScript language, obviously, because he designed his program to use PS as the standard for presenting graphical output of the data structures he built himself. It's perfectly logical. Not the matter of "happen to know". Being mathematician, he is also into classic programming languages he mentions (like Fortran, Pascal, probably LISP too), and as any mathematician out there - he is very devoted to TEX word-processing system.
      I presume he loved MAC especially, because of that "notebook" visual paradigm that was brought into public. MAC epitomized the concept, before other computers like Amiga or Atari ST, PC even less. But other half of the 80's sure was the period of GUI environments.
      Anyways - the guy is just one cool creative mathematician & computer scientist. Not mandatory a geek. A guy that does his job and enjoys it.

    • @luciengrondin5802
      @luciengrondin5802 3 года назад +1

      @@cybermodo To be honest it didn't occur to me that the reason he knows PostScript might be that he developed a software that relied on it.
      Most people who use TeX or LaTeX know PostScript is a thing but never bothered to learn it. Wolfram probably had to, just like Donald Knuth.
      Also I hope it's clear I wasn't trying to be disrespectful in any way. The guy is brilliant and he created an amazing and beautiful program.

    • @cybermodo
      @cybermodo 3 года назад

      ​ @Lucien Grondin , it was clear, I just found it interesting to make distinction. There are so many geeks out there getting involved in so many stuff that have nothing to do with their profession. But Wolfram is obvious professional that seems like taking great pleasure in his profession. That is all, and I felt like it was nice to write about.

  • @exmodule6323
    @exmodule6323 Год назад +4

    The Mother of All Demos

  • @richardjblackman
    @richardjblackman Год назад +4

    I remember spending almost a whole day solving some integrals for my degree. I never knew about mathematica, could've helped me check some of those integration by parts problems.

  • @luciengrondin5802
    @luciengrondin5802 3 года назад +11

    Mathematica really is an impressive software, and apparently its design has not changed much since the beginning, probably because it was very well thought of. Kind of like lisp, I guess, but also because just like lisp, deep down it's more or less just lambda calculus, and it's a very fundamental computational paradigm.

  • @cybermodo
    @cybermodo 3 года назад +7

    I love the elegance of a big 40 columns font on a sparse background, almost like Commodore 64 text mode. Minimal use of GUI bells & whistles, this could pass well on C64's GEOS user interface with ease. Back in the days we craved for 80 columns text modes and wild screen designs with icons and menus all over the place. But this is so cool in its minimalism, almost in touch with command line, but with decent graphics mode involved.
    Love retro computing. :)

  • @jondor654
    @jondor654 9 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating glimpse from the early turns on one road less travelled

  • @teldjounenoureddine7086
    @teldjounenoureddine7086 6 лет назад +13

    I think mathematica is the best mathemaics progam

  • @user-dv8ym8ry9g
    @user-dv8ym8ry9g Месяц назад

    WOW. This video will go down in the history of computing.

  • @angrygary122
    @angrygary122 2 года назад +1

    That's hillarious!Looking back :))))))) I can already see his thinking

  • @chumsky8754
    @chumsky8754 7 лет назад +20

    A great tool . Thoughts + books (previous thoughts from others) + Mathematica == Imagination Party

  • @adamkadmon6339
    @adamkadmon6339 Год назад +2

    I tell you, this stuff will be the future.

  • @harriehausenman8623
    @harriehausenman8623 3 года назад +5

    This is so cool!
    And an amazing production quality, too.

  • @sahmadi1000
    @sahmadi1000 6 лет назад +5

    Such a great demo! Thank you.

  • @alepatrik3777
    @alepatrik3777 2 года назад +2

    he never changed

  • @notlessgrossman163
    @notlessgrossman163 3 года назад +2

    Way ahead of its time

  • @abdulhaseebfaridi2721
    @abdulhaseebfaridi2721 4 года назад +1

    incredible work

  • @DavidsKanal
    @DavidsKanal 6 лет назад +33

    36:20 Sneaky. Guess the WolframAlpha logo was born here.

    • @selfstudypk
      @selfstudypk 4 года назад +2

      exactly

    • @PatchyE
      @PatchyE 4 года назад +6

      Well Mathematica has been using that logo long before Wolfram Alpha came out...

    • @DavidsKanal
      @DavidsKanal 4 года назад +3

      @@vickykarlitachannel7909 Bro you ok?

  • @paulussantosociwidjaja4781
    @paulussantosociwidjaja4781 Год назад

    Thank you for this video to learn. The face here is more familiar than in other videos Thanks GOD for Stephen Wolfram.

  • @TomokoAbe_
    @TomokoAbe_ 5 лет назад +3

    I have version 5 and it's great!

  • @finnjake6174
    @finnjake6174 4 года назад +6

    God has blessed this man.

  • @_John_P
    @_John_P 3 года назад +10

    So it is finally demonstrated that Stephen Wolfram is best watched at 2x normal speed, no matter how far in the past.

    • @jondor654
      @jondor654 9 месяцев назад +1

      Whoa. I will need more heatsinks shortly

  • @TomokoAbe_
    @TomokoAbe_ 5 лет назад +2

    Pretty amazing!

  • @fahimshahriyar2801
    @fahimshahriyar2801 6 лет назад +2

    truly helpful

  • @rb_-zc9nv
    @rb_-zc9nv 4 года назад +9

    I dig the bearded stephen wolfram look

  • @pjmoran42
    @pjmoran42 3 года назад +3

    How do Maple and Mathematic relate? I assume they both spawn from the same root.

  • @a.s.l711
    @a.s.l711 3 года назад

    what is the function to show every single steps during evaluation.

  • @NTC
    @NTC 5 лет назад +2

    at this time I was trying to learn A B C and 1 2 3 he already had invented something incredible

    • @uploadJ
      @uploadJ 4 года назад

      I was working with MathCad ver 2.5, a DOS based "calculating" program somewhere in that time frame ...

  • @stevensiew4072
    @stevensiew4072 6 лет назад +15

    Stephen still has his hair.

    • @antoniolewis1016
      @antoniolewis1016 5 лет назад +6

      Yes, but he keeps his hair off his head now.

  • @tengs_penkwe
    @tengs_penkwe Год назад

    impressive

  • @johnhammer8668
    @johnhammer8668 2 года назад +1

    What is the computer and operating system its running on ?

  • @AyushBhattfe
    @AyushBhattfe 6 лет назад +5

    When was this video released?

  • @haidorali9961
    @haidorali9961 5 лет назад

    Thanks

  • @lukiyanazziwa6906
    @lukiyanazziwa6906 3 года назад

    Wow! i hope it will help me

  • @rfengr00
    @rfengr00 2 года назад +2

    What computer was this running on?

  • @carlosgarza31
    @carlosgarza31 2 года назад +1

    1989 I was wondering why my rasperry pi was solving equations faster then his computer.

  • @davideaccorsi5637
    @davideaccorsi5637 9 месяцев назад +1

    The difference in intelligence beween prof. Wolfram and me is calculated by Mathematica here: 2:08

    • @jondor654
      @jondor654 9 месяцев назад +1

      Same here. Well he is a mighty exponent

  • @alexwilson8034
    @alexwilson8034 3 года назад +6

    THE BEARD THO

  • @budiardjo6610
    @budiardjo6610 10 месяцев назад

    this is really cool, how he could optimizecomputational software with limited hardware in 1989?

  • @farerse
    @farerse 2 года назад +1

    what computer is he using? a PC 286 ?

  • @TheFinalRevelation2
    @TheFinalRevelation2 2 года назад +1

    A rare super genius .. .or perhaps a time traveler

  • @lowkaivuan
    @lowkaivuan 2 года назад +1

    And the rest is history, .

  • @empathematics8928
    @empathematics8928 3 года назад +1

    I want the Atari version of Mathematica!!

  • @w0ttheh3ll
    @w0ttheh3ll 3 года назад

    Wow, his voice is exactly the same, but I wouldn't have recognised him from the video.

  • @exmodule6323
    @exmodule6323 Год назад +1

    Maybe AI and the Wolfram Language can one day restore the good professor’s hair

  • @bariselem7097
    @bariselem7097 19 часов назад

    Why use matlab?

  • @swagatochatterjee7104
    @swagatochatterjee7104 Год назад +1

    Holy! He wasn't bald and clean shaven!

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад +1

    a 4 kant wave can be replaced by infinity sinus and cosinus waves

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    i can move databas in hollerit format to another platform

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад +2

    i have forget the 5 platonic bodies

  • @ibrahimnazemqader9153
    @ibrahimnazemqader9153 5 лет назад +5

    great but too late to publish this video

    • @arnaldofernandez
      @arnaldofernandez 3 года назад +1

      I believe everything you see here still works today.

  • @kenw8875
    @kenw8875 Год назад

    John Bonham. John Henry Bonham. Moby Dick Dick!

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    i want al tangents of an hyperbel creating a torus and show all planar sections of the turus

    • @torleifhansson3545
      @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

      i have all schaums outline and chemical rubber company 21

    • @torleifhansson3545
      @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

      i begin with numerical analysis in matemathica

    • @torleifhansson3545
      @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

      att years old rombergs method and gauss w(x) inbedded

    • @torleifhansson3545
      @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

      if n dogs are placed i xy plane and dog 1 chase dog 2 and dog n chase dog 1 which cordinat collapse all dogs

    • @torleifhansson3545
      @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

      minimum step h

  • @WildAnimalChannel
    @WildAnimalChannel 5 лет назад +3

    It'll never catch on.

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    i can shuffle pixes around the network using udp/IP

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад +3

    i must learn fourier transform

  • @susanavaldemar4232
    @susanavaldemar4232 Год назад +1

    Hello good evening, I am trying to solve the following logarithm with wolfram mathematica but I can't get the program to give me a solution: Log2[X = 6] is 64 but I can't get the program to give me that solution, how do I do it as is the syntax that should i put??

  • @isaacmendes1256
    @isaacmendes1256 3 года назад +1

    All the [real] players know who they are early on...🤖

  • @elaineharvey5990
    @elaineharvey5990 4 года назад +1

    05152020
    👉10:13 Brussel_J ? ... year 2024

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    I HAVE FORGOT HOW TO DO (A+B)^P/Q

  • @ChannelMath
    @ChannelMath Год назад

    haha he had a beard?

  • @ManishKumar-xx7ny
    @ManishKumar-xx7ny 2 года назад

    hair vs no hair

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    i wrote a design checker to correct lee algoritm

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    BUT LONG AGO A GOD HAS DONE IT

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk 3 года назад

      But God uses Mathematica now. 😉

  • @micc6462
    @micc6462 Год назад

    Eh ?

  • @DinHamburg
    @DinHamburg 9 месяцев назад

    who is that long haired hippie?

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    FUNKIS

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    i have shaums outline for scientist and engineeres

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    PASCALS TRIANGEL AT LEVEL N TO GENERATE MANDELBROT SET OF LEVEL N

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    3 CANONS OF FLOATING CONCRETE BILDS HOUSE

  • @John-wd9mx
    @John-wd9mx 6 лет назад +7

    Why nerds in the 80s always have that beard?
    Because shaving is a waste of time

  • @CandidDate
    @CandidDate 6 лет назад +3

    Have we REALLY made any progress? Or is everything nowadays ersatz and sugar coated --- although, in the near future, coders will be rendered obsolete by AI.

    • @happylittlemonk
      @happylittlemonk 6 лет назад

      You said it well. I kept away from all these nonsense because just like the space programs it is very misleading and because it give us a false sense of security and hope. I just watched the exact demo by Wolfram himself done 30 years after this. The program is amazing but it fails half the time. I mean you cannot rely on its credibility in terms of AI. This is because it is NOT thinking. We have to teach it to do specific things in very specific domain. It does not know when it makes a mistake and that is very dangerous.
      I have spend the last decade thinking about the correct solution at a basic level and found something truly revolutionary that can solve all these probelms. (agimachine .com)

    • @ChrisOrillia
      @ChrisOrillia 6 лет назад +4

      Many people are alive today, or are no longer in pain because of that "ersatz and sugar coating," how many? Billions with agricultural progress and vaccines alone. Your attitude seems to have fallen, or at least leans out from the 90s, with its post-modern scene of pseudo-fighting-of-the-power with cynicism--somewhere where NO progress has been made. Your prediction even fails to predict *now*, since we now know there really is no "AI," rather only real "I," and in the future, we are one with it.

    • @CandidDate
      @CandidDate Год назад +1

      March 2023 - and I was right on this particular prediction

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    I AM XPERT ON CAD/CAM

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    NEWTON HAS THE GENERAL FORMEL FOR WHAT CAN BE DONE

  • @theSpicyHam
    @theSpicyHam 5 лет назад

    recent of, probable, also whether or wolfram maths was named of fhim, probable, also or him, probable, also awesome man of, perhaps also of, probable, also or, probable, or perhaps, also, another of, perhaps, also of

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    RECTBOX PIXELS OPS SHUFFLE

  • @torleifhansson3545
    @torleifhansson3545 6 лет назад

    SKOLÅDA I SMALLER SKOLÅDA

  • @benzflynn
    @benzflynn Год назад

    Too loud, explains one piece of math jargon with something still more jargonized.