--- In [email protected], Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> On Jun 7, 2005, at 10:01 AM, sparaig wrote:
> 
> > sure, but the transition is going to be very rocky. Notice that 
it is
> > happening on the low-end first, with Minis and the like. The place
> > where INtel's speed advantage counts is on the high-end, which 
will
> > be the last to be converted over to x86. This should tell you
> > something about how odd the whole thing is going to be.
> 
> The reason for this is there are still a few innovations on the 
high 
> end ("in the pipeline" as Jobs put it) for the G5. So you will 
still 
> continue to see some new G5's coming out.
> 
> The guy who originally wrote Mathematica and his main developer 
were 
> there. They ported Mathematica in two hours....and that was without 
any 
> advance prep--they were told it was secret and just showed up a 
couple 
> of days before. The porting will not be anything like carbonization 
> (which can be lengthy).

Mathematica was designed to be cross-platform. You can even create a 
new algorithm in Mathematica's scripting language, paste it into a C 
source file with the right meta-characters surrounding it, and 
compile a native version of your Mathematica algorithm.




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