From newsdesk at wolfram.com Tue Dec 9 16:25:05 2008 From: newsdesk at wolfram.com (newsdesk@wolfram.com) Date: Tue Dec 9 16:25:07 2008 Subject: Announcement: Mathematica Player 7 is now available Message-ID: Wolfram Research today announced the release of Mathematica Player 7, a free download that allows anyone anywhere to interact with dynamic documents and applications using new Mathematica technology. In the recently released Mathematica 7, Wolfram Research integrated over 500 new functions and 12 major application areas including image processing, parallel high-performance computing (HPC), new on-demand curated data, and other computational innovations. Mathematica Player 7 extends those advances to interactive publishing by letting users deploy dynamic Mathematica documents that run freely* on any compatible computer. Authoring with Mathematica and the Publish for Player web service couldn't be simpler: educators, researchers, and others upload their Mathematica notebooks or applications to the Publish for Player website and instantly get back Player-compatible files. That means that people can now share dynamic content across classrooms and workgroups and publish their work without any software barriers. Mere documents become robust applications--virtually freestanding and cross- platform--in seconds. Interactive publishing with Mathematica means that homework, quizzes, presentations, books, and research no longer have to be static documents. Publish for Player makes it easy to include point-and-click results, animated 3D models, real-time data from the web, and more-- all powered by the built-in Mathematica engine. The free Mathematica Player 7 software and more information about the Publish for Player process are available online: http://www.wolfram.com/player Over 4000 freely downloadable Player applications, including interactive content created with Mathematica 7, are available through the highly popular Wolfram Demonstrations Project: http://demonstrations.wolfram.com *Licensing restrictions apply for free use. Details are available online: http://www.wolfram.com/interactivedeployment/licensingterms.html From Francois.Delebecque at inria.fr Fri Dec 19 07:59:50 2008 From: Francois.Delebecque at inria.fr (Delebecque Francois) Date: Fri Dec 19 07:59:52 2008 Subject: ScicosLab 4.3 has been released Message-ID: ScicosLab ScicosLab is a free environment for scientific computation similar in many respects to Matlab/Simulink, providing Matlab functionalities through Scilab 4, and, Simulink and Modelica functionalities via Scicos. ScicosLab is the new name of ScilabGTK. This change of name has been decided in order to avoid all confusion with Scilab, which is no longer developed at INRIA. ScicosLab is made available by the researchers of the Metalau team at INRIA and ENPC who originally developed Scilab. ScicosLab is used in particular for distributing software stemming from the research activities at Metalau, such as Scicos (www.scicos.org) and the Maxplus algebra tool (www.maxplus.org). ScicosLab (ex-ScilabGTK) is available for most Windows, Linux and MacOSX operating systems, and can be downloaded from www.scicoslab.org. From mrmercer at hotmail.co.uk Wed Dec 24 19:50:01 2008 From: mrmercer at hotmail.co.uk (big c poster) Date: Wed Dec 24 19:50:04 2008 Subject: cheap games 92% 0ff Message-ID: we have opened a new shop for games at www.mercerbay.com so take a look pick up game for xbox and psp for only $1 -- Posted by News Bulk Poster Unregistered version