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Analyze, Visualize, Simulate: Mathematica for University Research

In this Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 course, learn why Mathematica is used for academic research with a look at its programming language, support for parallel computing, and multiple publishing and deployment options.

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78 videos match your search.
This Hands-on Start to Mathematica (Version 12) tutorial screencast provides step-by-step instruction to get you started with Mathematica. During this video, you'll learn how to enter queries through free-form input and ...
See why Mathematica is the complete homework and research software to calculate and analyze, learn and explore, visualize and illustrate, and document and publish.
Take a quick tour of Mathematica and see what makes it a complete environment for education and academic research.
Terry Honan
In this Wolfram Technology Conference presentation, Terry Honan, assistant division chair of geology and physics at Blinn College, discusses the use of Mathematica and CDF to create dynamic teaching tools ...
Nikolay Brodskiy
In this Wolfram Technology Conference talk, Nikolay Brodskiy shares his experiences with using Wolfram technologies for a computer-based approach to teaching calculus.
Filip vrček
In this presentation from the Wolfram Technology Conference, Filip vrček walks through classroom examples to show how Mathematica is improving the teaching and learning of mathematics.
Radim Kusak
In this Wolfram Technology Conference presentation, Radim Kusak shares his experiences in creating the course, Introduction to Wolfram Mathematica for Teachers, for his colleagues at Charles University in Prague.
See how Wolfram technologies like Mathematica and Wolfram|Alpha enhance math education. The video features visual examples of course materials, apps, and other resources to help teachers and students cover ...
Broaden your educational communication pipeline–from interactive courseware authoring to cutting-edge research collaboration. This video features visual examples of how Wolfram technologies are advancing education.
Watch an introduction to the Wolfram Demonstrations Project, a free resource that uses dynamic computation to illuminate concepts in science, technology, mathematics, art, finance, and a range of other fields.
Crystal Fantry
This screencast from the Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 explores the various ways that mobile devices can tap into the power of Mathematica and Wolfram|Alpha to enhance learning in math, ...
Eric Schulz
Eric Schulz created the electronic version of Calculus: Early Transcendentals as a Computable Document Format (CDF) ebook. In this talk from the Wolfram Technology Conference 2011, he shares wisdom gained from ...
In this video, get a quick introduction to the Wolfram Education Portal, which features teaching and learning tools created with Mathematica and Wolfram|Alpha, including a dynamic textbook, lesson plans, ...
Conrad Wolfram
computerbasedmath.org is a project to build a new math curriculum with computer-based computation at its heart. In this talk from the Wolfram Technology Conference 2011, Conrad Wolfram discusses the concept, ...
Nikki Johnson
Explore the various ways mobile devices can tap into the power of Mathematica and Wolfram|Alpha to enhance learning in math, science, and even music classrooms in this recorded presentation ...
Michael Morrison
In this Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 course, learn why Mathematica is used for academic research with a look at its programming language, support for parallel computing, and multiple publishing and ...
Cliff Hastings
This Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 course explores functionality relevant to education. Topics include a survey of interactive models and computation and visualization capabilities useful for teaching.
Andy Dorsett
In this Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 course, learn different ways to use Mathematica to enhance your calculus class, such as using interactive models and connecting calculus to the real world ...
Kelvin Mischo
This Wolfram Mathematica Virtual Conference 2011 course gives educators an overall picture of how Mathematica can benefit an engineering curriculum with examples of modeling, simulation, visualization, and document creation.
Eric Schulz
See how mathematics instructor Eric Schulz used CDF to deliver an interactive textbook, giving a new model for visual instruction and learning.