![]() But the advent of LLMs-and our new Chat Notebooks-opens up Wolfram Language to vastly more people. We’ve always built-and deployed-Wolfram Language so it can be accessible to as many people as possible. But LLMs are also important to Wolfram Language-in providing a rich linguistic interface to the language. The Wolfram Language is important to LLMs-in providing a way to access computation and computational knowledge from within the LLM. But I think it’s a tribute to the strength of its design that it now fits so well with LLMs-with so much synergy. The Wolfram Language wasn’t originally designed with the recent success of LLMs in mind. So it becomes the medium through which humans can confirm or correct what LLMs do, to deliver computational language code that can be confidently assembled into a larger system. And-unlike traditional programming languages- Wolfram Language is intended not only for humans to write, but also to read and think in. ![]() The attributes that make Wolfram Language easy for humans to write, yet rich in expressive power, also make it ideal for LLMs to write. Because with the advent of LLMs our language has become a unique bridge between humans, AIs and computation. And now-in 2023-there’s a new significance to this. Our long-term objective has been to build a full-scale computational language that can represent everything computationally, in a way that’s effective for both computers and humans. From the whole idea of symbolic programming, to the concept of notebooks, the universal applicability of symbolic expressions, the notion of computational knowledge, and concepts like instant APIs and so much more, we’ve been energetically continuing to push the frontier over all these years. So much about Mathematica was ahead of its time in 1988, and perhaps even more about Mathematica and the Wolfram Language is ahead of its time today, 35 years later. And it was wonderful to be able to take (on a floppy disk) the notebook I created with Version 1 and have it immediately come to life on a modern computer.īut even as we’ve maintained compatibility over all these years, the scope of our system has grown out of all recognition-with everything in Version 1 now occupying but a small sliver of the whole range of functionality of the modern Wolfram Language: Last Friday I fired up Version 1 on an old Mac SE/30 computer (with 2.5 megabytes of memory), and it was a thrill see functions like Plot and NestList work just as they would today-albeit a lot slower. We’ve worked very hard to make its design as clean and coherent as possible-and to make it a timeless way to elegantly represent computation and everything that can be described through it. And to me it’s incredible how far we’ve come in these 35 years-yet how consistent we’ve been in our mission and goals, and how well we’ve been able to just keep building on the foundations we created all those years ago.Īnd when it comes to what’s now Wolfram Language, there’s a wonderful timelessness to it. Last Friday (June 23) we celebrated 35 years since Version 1.0 of Mathematica (and what’s now Wolfram Language). It’s only been 196 days since we released Version 13.2, but there’s a lot that’s new, not least a whole subsystem around LLMs. ![]() ![]() Today we’re launching Version 13.3 of Wolfram Language and Mathematica-both available immediately on desktop and cloud. ![]() The Leading Edge of 2023 Technology … and Beyond ![]()
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