Mathematica 5.2: Breaking the Memory Barrier with 64-Bit
Computing, Adding Multicore Performance
July 12, 2005--Wolfram Research announces Mathematica 5.2, the
64-bit multicore release and the latest version of the world-renowned
science and technology software system Mathematica.
Hot on the heels of Mathematica 5.1,
itself released just eight months ago, 5.2 brings 64-bit technology to
all supported platforms--an industry first. More than 4.3GB of memory
(the 32-bit address limit) can now be addressed, and high-precision or
large numbers are processed in 64-bit rather than 32-bit digit chunks
for faster computation.
"Mathematica users push the limits of computing--constantly
requiring more memory and computational horsepower. That is why we
have decided to be first to market with all-platform 64-bit and
multicore support," says Roger Germundsson, director of research and
development. "And we've been able to do this because of our
state-of-the art software engineering processes and close working
partnerships with platform vendors such as Microsoft, Apple, Intel,
and Sun Microsystems."
"Mathematica is now the ideal environment for large
computations and simulations," says Tom Wickham-Jones, director of
kernel technology. "From 5.0 onwards we've dramatically sped up
computation, reduced memory usage, and introduced grid computing; now
with 5.2 we've enabled Mathematica to take advantage of more
memory and more CPUs for computation, too."
Mathematica 5.2 also supports automatically threaded numerical
linear algebra on all mainstream platforms, enabling linear algebra
operations to automatically run in parallel on all available processor
cores whether multiple or multicore CPUs. Mainstream multicore-based
systems are now available and are expected to be ubiquitous by early
next year, including in notebooks and entry-level systems.
Mathematica 5.2 contains many additional enhancements, including:
- 64-bit-enhanced arbitrary-precision numerics
- Vector-based performance enhancements
- Automatic binary installation selection
- Bundled notebook indexing for desktop search
- SSH support for secure remote kernels
- vCard and RSS import
- New algorithms for symbolic differential equations
- Enhanced performance for linear Diophantine systems
- Enhanced quadratic quantifier elimination
- Singular-case support for high-level special functions
- Enhanced statistics charts
- MathematicaMark 5.2 benchmark now covering grids and clusters
"If you're at the frontiers of technical work, you need computing
technology that is as well," says Conrad Wolfram, director of
strategic development. "Mathematica 5.2 again demonstrates our
commitment to rapid and continuing support for the latest computing
technology."
Mathematica 5.2 is available for Windows (32-bit/64-bit), Mac
OS X (32-bit/64-bit), and Linux (32-bit/64-bit) as well as the following
workstation and server platforms: Linux (Itanium), Sun Solaris (x86-64,
SPARC), HP Tru64 UNIX, HP-UX, IBM AIX, SGI IRIX, and compatible
systems. More details are available on the Mathematica website.
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