Wolfram Language and Mathematica Version 15, AI Assistant, Symbolic Music, More

(writings.stephenwolfram.com)

61 points | by alok-g 2 hours ago

4 comments

  • Lucasoato 1 hour ago
    I’ve used Mathematica at university, it’s so great! Creating fractals, animations and so on is so easy and intuitive.

    The problem though is that Wolfram is a walled garden. When you think about integrating it in an enterprise environment, you get hit by such high costs, it stops making sense. Imagine if they open sourced it, I feel like their products have so much utility, buried deep down Wolfram ecosystem and conventions.

    • orochimaaru 41 minutes ago
      It doesn't make sense even for academia. Reproducibility is an issue and as we've seen with recent fraudulent claims in major publications - it's what is going to be used for verification of research.

      Many years back while in grad school I could not reproduce a result from a paper. Thankfully they had provided the data as public but not the code. I emailed the authors and got some matlab code back. My university didn't have a matlab subscription. Octave saved me there since the syntax is similar.

      But with something like mathematica and the price of it you will never be able to have a wide verification of the result if the software is not free.

      Also, a lot of things in industry gain traction first in academia (especially math tools). So unless academic traction is dealt with mathematica's headway in industry will remain limited. They are still a profitable company. So I'm guessing there are deep pocketed clients who purchase the tooling.

    • Joel_Mckay 1 hour ago
      Wolfram did have Visual Studio API integration at one point, and it was useful reducing algorithmic symbolic design complexity. However, it was mostly the academically controversial assumptions that Mathematica makes that undermined its credibility in many faculties.

      For example, when digging into GNU Octave you will find many of its libraries were built on peer reviewed legacy code provably reproducible with prior aerospace published works.

      The problem with closed source academic programs isn't features or even quality, but rather one of traceable Metrology and scientific rigor. =3

  • stblack 1 hour ago
    I'm a huge fan of Mathematica; I've been a subscriber for many years. There's much to love about the product, but its AI assistant isn't among them.

    Claude Caude is much better at Mathematica than Wolfram's own AI assistant. I think they flat-out acknowledge the very limited abilities of Mathematica's AI assistant in this version 15 announcement.

    The Wolfram AI assistant is so bad I unsubscribed from it. By the sounds of it, a basic AI assistant is offered included with subscriptions now. I feel it's borderline criminal they were charging for their hallucinatory AI assistant in the past.

    • raincole 28 minutes ago
      Honestly I've found even Gemini Flash is better than Wolfram assistant...

      But that's fine. Mathematica client supports openrouter as LLM provider anyway so we can use whatever we want.

  • SilverElfin 14 minutes ago
    Does anyone use this outside of college classes? It looks so great in these demos but I never hear of companies using it.
    • afolkest 4 minutes ago
      Not industry, but it's pretty popular among theoretical physics researchers.
  • aaron695 1 hour ago
    [dead]