Tag Archives: wolfram

Instantly Free Up 1GB On Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice And Wolfram – Lifehacker Australia

Lifehacker Australia Instantly Free Up 1GB On Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice And Wolfram Lifehacker Australia One of the really nice things about the newest builds of Raspbian is that it comes with just about all the software you need to get running. The downside of that is that all that software takes up a ton of space.

Read the original:
Instantly Free Up 1GB On Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice And Wolfram – Lifehacker Australia

Share

Instantly Free Up Almost 1GB on Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice and Wolfram – Lifehacker

Lifehacker Instantly Free Up Almost 1GB on Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice and Wolfram Lifehacker One of the really nice things about the newest builds of Raspbian is that it comes with just about all the software you need to get running. The downside of that is that all that software takes up a ton of space

Read more here:
Instantly Free Up Almost 1GB on Your Raspberry Pi By Ditching LibreOffice and Wolfram – Lifehacker

Share

Solar Eclipses from Past to Future, Earth to Jupiter

Liz: Here’s another space-themed post from our friends at Wolfram Research , showing how the Wolfram Language can be used to visualize solar eclipses total and partial, past and present, and as seen from Earth, Mars and Jupiter. ____ You may have heard that on March 20 there was a solar eclipse. Depending on where you are geographically, a solar eclipse may or may not be visible

Originally posted here:
Solar Eclipses from Past to Future, Earth to Jupiter

Share

Solar Eclipses from Past to Future, Earth to Jupiter

Liz: Here’s another space-themed post from our friends at Wolfram Research , showing how the Wolfram Language can be used to visualize solar eclipses total and partial, past and present, and as seen from Earth, Mars and Jupiter. ____ You may have heard that on March 20 there was a solar eclipse. Depending on where you are geographically, a solar eclipse may or may not be visible

Originally posted here:
Solar Eclipses from Past to Future, Earth to Jupiter

Share

Where’s Wally? Find him faster with Wolfram Language

If you ever want to get back at your sibling for some minor wrongdoing, there is no better way than to borrow all of their “Where’s Wally”** books and use a big red marker pen to give him speech bubbles shouting, “Here I am! Over here!” On every single page.

Read more:
Where’s Wally? Find him faster with Wolfram Language

Share

A Big Year for Dwarf Planets

Liz: For us, one of the most powerful features of the Wolfram Language is the way it understands real-world (or, in this case, real-solar-system) objects, making it easy to incorporate data on all kinds of things into your projects. In this rather lovely instance from the good people at Wolfram, you can calculate and visualise the relative size of a number of those things on your Raspberry Pi, including the state of Texas, the dwarf planet Ceres, the former dwarf planet Pluto, and the Moon.

Read the original post:
A Big Year for Dwarf Planets

Share

Controlling Telescopes with Raspberry Pi and Mathematica

Eben: Here’s a guest post from Tom Sherlock, describing how he’s been able to control a telescope using a Raspberry Pi, Mathematica and the Wolfram Language. As an amateur astronomer, I’m always interested in ways to use Mathematica in my hobby. In earlier blog posts, I’ve written about how Mathematica can be used to process and improve images taken of planets and nebulae

Go here to see the original:
Controlling Telescopes with Raspberry Pi and Mathematica

Share

Mathematica 10 – now available for your Pi!

Liz: If you use Raspbian, you’ll have noticed that Mathematica and the Wolfram Language come bundled for free with your Raspberry Pi. (A little boast here: we were only the second computer ever on which Mathematica has been included for free use as standard

Continued here:
Mathematica 10 – now available for your Pi!

Share