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Wolfram Research, Inc. (/ ˈ w ʊ l f r əm / WUUL-frəm) is an American multinational company that creates computational technology. Wolfram's flagship product is the technical computing program Wolfram Mathematica, first released on June 23, 1988.
Stephen Wolfram was born in London in 1959 to Hugo and Sybil Wolfram, both German Jewish refugees to the United Kingdom. [10] His maternal grandmother was British psychoanalyst Kate Friedlander. Wolfram's father, Hugo Wolfram, was a textile manufacturer and served as managing director of the Lurex Company—makers of the fabric Lurex. [11]
Wolfram Research, a software company known for the symbolic computation program Mathematica Wolfram Language , the programming language used by Mathematica Wolfram code , a naming system for one-dimensional cellular automaton rules introduced by Stephen Wolfram
WolframAlpha (/ ˈ w ʊ l f. r əm-/ WUULf-rəm-) is an answer engine developed by Wolfram Research. [3] It is offered as an online service that answers factual queries by computing answers from externally sourced data.
Wolfram Mathematica is a software system with built-in libraries for several areas of technical computing that allows machine learning, statistics, symbolic computation, data manipulation, network analysis, time series analysis, NLP, optimization, plotting functions and various types of data, implementation of algorithms, creation of user ...
The Wolfram Language (/ ˈ w ʊ l f r əm / WUUL-frəm) is a proprietary, [7] general-purpose, very high-level multi-paradigm programming language [8] developed by Wolfram Research. It emphasizes symbolic computation , functional programming , and rule-based programming [ 9 ] and can employ arbitrary structures and data. [ 9 ]
Wolfram is best known today for his Parzival, sometimes regarded as the greatest of all German Arthurian romances.Based on Chrétien de Troyes' unfinished Perceval, le Conte du Graal, it is the first extant work in German to have as its subject the Holy Grail (in Wolfram's interpretation a gemstone).
Wolfram, S (2002) A New Kind of Science. Wolfram Media. Wolfram Research, Inc., "Prize Announced for Determining the Boundaries of Turing Machine Computation". Archived 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Formal announcement that Alex Smith has won the prize. —, Wolfram 2,3 Turing Machine Research Prize. Invitation to contestants.