Details
Main Page | Preliminary Schedule
Who Should Attend
Anyone with an interest in the potential impact of computing on engineering, finance, research, and education will benefit from these seminars. Those not yet familiar with Mathematica will gain an overview of the system and discover the breadth of applications it can address, while experts will get firsthand experience with the most important breakthroughs in Mathematica technology since Version 1 was released in 1988.
Seminar Locations
Tuesday, March 27--Marseille, France
C.I.R.M.
163 avenue de Luminy
13288 Marseille
FRANCE
Map, Directions
Wednesday, March 28--Grenoble, France
Note: All Grenoble sessions are now full and
registration is now closed. If you have any questions or if this causes any
problems, please email events-europe@wolfram.com.
Institut Laue-Langevin
6 rue Jules Horowitz
38042 Grenoble
FRANCE
Map
Thursday, March 29--Toulouse, France
CICT-Université Paul Sabatier
118 route de Narbonne
Bâtiment 1R3
31062 Toulouse
FRANCE
Map
Friday, March 30--Bordeaux, France
ENSAM Bordeaux-Talence
"Le grand amphithéâtre"
Esplanade des Arts et Métiers
33405 Talence
FRANCE
Map
Preliminary Schedule
The preliminary seminar schedules are available here.
Languages
Official languages during the conference are English and French.
Training
Tuesday, March 27--Marseille, France
Note: The Marseille training session is full, but we are keeping a list of interested seminar registrants in case of cancellations. You can indicate interest in the registration form's "Questions
ou commentaires" field.
Faculté des Sciences de Luminy
163 avenue de Luminy
Bâtiment A--rez de chaussée (salle située presque en face de l'amphithéâtre 6)
13288 Marseille
FRANCE
Wednesday, March 28--Grenoble, France
Note: All Grenoble sessions are now full and
registration is now closed. If you have any questions or if this causes any
problems, please email events-europe@wolfram.com.
Registrants will be assigned to one of two identical sessions at these locations:
CNRS Délégation Alpes
25 rue des Martyrs
Bâtiment G salle G420 3ème étage
38042 Grenoble
FRANCE
Map
ESRF
6 rue Jules Horowitz
Bâtiment MTBF 1er étage
38042 Grenoble
FRANCE
Map
Thursday, March 29--Toulouse, France
Note: The Marseille training session is full, but we are keeping a list of interested seminar registrants in case of cancellations. You can indicate interest in the registration form's "Questions
ou commentaires" field.
CICT--Université Paul Sabatier
118 route de Narbonne
Bâtiment 1CN
31062 Toulouse
FRANCE
Map
Friday, March 30--Bordeaux, France
ENSAM Bordeaux-Talence
Esplanade des Arts et Métiers
Salles M1, M2, M3 1er étage
33405 Talence
FRANCE
Map
Contact Details
If you have any questions about this tour, please contact:
Wolfram Research France
118/122 avenue de France
75013 Paris
FRANCE
Numéro vert (toll free in France) : 0800 90 18 96
Fax : 01 46 46 10 00
email: info-france@wolfram.com
About the Featured Speakers
Jon McLoone has been a senior developer with Wolfram Research
since 1992, working on software development, system design, technical
writing, and strategy. He supports educational projects in cooperation with
universities and government research, and has lectured on Mathematica around
the world. McLoone has a degree in mathematics from Durham University.
Roman Maeder is one of the developers of Mathematica and the author of the book Programming in
Mathematica, the standard reference for programming. Other books by Maeder include The Mathematica
Programmer, The Mathematica Programmer II, and Computer Science with Mathematica: Theory and
Practice for Science, Mathematics, and Engineering (English and German editions). Roman Maeder is also the
developer of the Parallel Computing Toolkit, one of the key components of gridMathematica. He is
the
author of the "M220: Programming in Mathematica" and "M245: Parallel Computation" courses.
About Wolfram Research and Mathematica
Wolfram Research is the world's leading developer of technical computing software, offering organization-wide
computing solutions. Led by Mathematica, its flagship product, the
company's software is relied on today by
several million enthusiastic users around the world and has received many awards for technical excellence. A
privately held company, Wolfram Research was founded in 1987 by Stephen Wolfram and is headquartered in the
United States, with offices in France, Europe, and Japan.
Mathematica is used in thousands of academic
institutions, research labs, and
companies
around the world. It is deployed both as an interactive calculation tool and a programming language across
fields as diverse as engineering, science, finance, and education. For details, see the Mathematica
website.
Additional information about Wolfram Research and its
products is available.