It could be, for example, that the downward trend in Mathematica interest is a reflection of a decision by WR to increase prices over time, to maximize profits, i.e. Now this "analysis" is of course over-simplistic. Or perhaps I should say, more accurately, its a challenge for proprietary mathematical programming languages: Its a general problem for mathematical programming languages. For example, here's the comparable chart for Matlab: Firstly this is not just a Mathematica issue. And someone, somewhere, in WR needs to be asking the question I am posing in this post, if they are seriously hoping to check that trend and reverse it. You don't need a model to figure out the long term trend in that time series. I realize that I am possibly the only Mathematica user to suffer from existential angst for the product, but still, its worth pausing to ask the question, what is Mathematica for? Meaning, what is its purpose?īut for those of you pragmatists tempted to roll your eyes and just get on with using it, let me motivate the question with a chart: Finance, Statistics & Business Analysis. ![]() Wolfram Knowledgebase Curated computable knowledge powering Wolfram|Alpha. Wolfram Universal Deployment System Instant deployment across cloud, desktop, mobile, and more. Wolfram Data Framework Semantic framework for real-world data.
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