
There are lots of other important workflows too. (Through the Wolfram Foundation, we’re also developing a permanent curated Notebook Archive for public-interest notebooks.) And people with Cloud Basic accounts can even publish their own notebooks in the cloud, though if they want to store them long term they’ll have to upgrade their account. And what this means is that the notebook becomes not just something you look at, but something you can immediately use and build on.Īnd, by the way, we’ve set it up so that anyone can make their own copy of a published notebook, and start using it all they need is a (free) Cloud Basic account. Because if you press the Make Your Own Copy button, you’ll get your own copy of the notebook, which you can not only read and interact with, but also edit and do computation in, right on the web. When a Wolfram Notebook is published to the cloud, it’s immediately something people can read and interact with. And-together with the power of the Wolfram Language as a computational language-it promises to usher in a new era of computational communication, and to be a crucial driver for the development of “computational X” fields. It’s an unprecedentedly easy way to get rich, interactive, computational content onto the web. Then you just press a button to publish it to the Wolfram Cloud-and immediately anyone anywhere can both read and interact with it on the web. You create a Wolfram Notebook-using all the power of the Wolfram Language and the Wolfram Notebook system-on the desktop or in the cloud. We’ve been working towards it for many years, but now it’s finally here: an incredibly smooth workflow for publishing Wolfram Notebooks to the web-that makes possible a new level of interactive publishing and computation-enabled communication.
