As a fan of cars, I find that even when I am perfectly happy with my vehicle, I check car lots and classifieds and car-dealer ads. This began in college when I had to drive a car that, let me just say, was not a high-performance vehicle. It got me from point A to point B most of the time, but it always needed work and I never knew when it would break down and leave me stranded. I always dreamed of driving a really nice automobile.
Working at Wolfram Research, I have many times heard the analogy of
Mathematica as a high-performance computational engine. The high-performance phrase takes me back to cars and I wondered, what kind of car would
Mathematica be? In my mind, it would clearly be something very fast that has a great engine under the hood but is easy to drive. A car I would've liked to have had in college. Then I thought about how many students have access to
Mathematica, which is much like a college student driving a brand-new sports car. It has more than enough power for most applications, and using it can make you look good.