
Mathematica is the latest milestone in an ongoing research and development process, featuring some of the biggest breakthroughs in technical computing since Mathematica was first released in 1988. The revolutionary advances of Version 6 are already being felt across the technical computing community and are setting the stage for dramatic developments that will redefine the very way we think about computation.
In the spirit of Mathematica's ongoing evolution and forging closer links with the R&D world, Wolfram Research is delighted to announce a series of seminars hosted with and for members of Fraunhofer Gesellschaft, whose scientists and researchers have used Mathematica as a cornerstone of their research since 1992.
The Fraunhofer Mathematica Seminars 2008 aim to explore the new landscape that Mathematica 6 opens up and the breadth of applications it can address in many diverse scientific research fields. The seminars provide a rare opportunity for senior Mathematica developers to exchange ideas and form closer working relationships with Fraunhofer Gesellschaft's leading scientists and researchers.
At each seminar, a senior developer from Wolfram Research will highlight the innovative features available right now in Mathematica 6, as well as cutting-edge developments that will be available in the forthcoming version. Some of the areas to be covered in detail are high-performance computing, parallelization, documentation, graphical interfaces, deployment, and on-demand curated data.
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Featured Speakers: |
Jon McLoone, Senior Developer, Wolfram Research Oliver Rübenkönig, Kernel Developer, Wolfram Research Roman Maeder, Director of Parallel Computing Technology, Wolfram Research |
These unique seminars are free, but space is limited and registration is required. To reserve your place, please complete the registration form.



