What is Mathematica?
Mathematica is the world's most powerful global computing environment. Ideal for use in engineering, mathematics, finance, physics, chemistry, biology, and a wide range of other fields, it makes possible a new level of automation in algorithmic computation, interactive manipulation, and dynamic presentation--as well as a whole new way of interacting with the world of data.
Getting Mathematica...
Mathematicais currently installed in the following locations:
- Computer labs: All campus labs
- Faculty office machines: by request
Mathematicacan also be installed on:
- Faculty/staff school-owned machines: Installers are available at your local download site or IT helpdesk.
- Faculty/staff personally-owned machines: Installers are available here.
- Students' personally-owned machines: Follow this link for a free license www.wolfram.com
Are you interested in putting Mathematica elsewhere? Please let IT or Andy Dorsett know.
What are the best steps to start using Mathematica?
If you are brand-new to Mathematica, below are some suggestions on the best ways to get started.
Students
- Watch the "Hands-On Start to Mathematica" tutorial screencast.
- Explore the Learning Center for topics relevant to your interests.
- Launch Mathematica, open the Classroom Assistant, and perform your first few computations.
- You're now ready for the projects that faculty will assign.
Teaching faculty
- Sign up for the "Overview of Mathematica for Education" seminar.
- Explore the Learning Center for topics relevant to your interests.
- Find some prebuilt examples and courseware from the Demonstrations Project, MathWorld, and the Library Archive.
- Assign the above steps in the student section to your classes as homework.
- Sign up for the Faculty Program.
Research faculty
- Sign up for the "Overview of Mathematica for Education" seminar.
- Take other seminars relevant to your work.
- Explore the Learning Center for topics relevant to your interests.
- Go to the Demonstrations Project site to see what's possible.
- Go to the Library Archive for additional resources.