All subscriptions purchased online are set to automatically renew. If at any time you would like to cancel your subscription, you can go to your Wolfram Account to stop future billing or contact Wolfram Customer Support.

Mathematica Student subscriptions are available to part-time or full-time primary and secondary students and students working toward an associate's, bachelor's, master's, doctoral or equivalent degree at an accredited educational institution or approved homeschool location. It is also available to part-time, non-degree-seeking students if required for a class. Mathematica may only be installed on the student's own personal computer and registered to the student.


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The length of plan you purchase dictates how long it can be used. With this restriction, you can only continue using Mathematica Student for as long as you are a student and still considered eligible.

After graduation, we recommend that you join the Wolfram Early Professionals Program, where you'll receive a free, six-month Mathematica Early Professionals License, so you can continue using Mathematica for both professional and personal use.

You also have the option to immediately convert your Mathematica Student subscription to a professional license. Wolfram offers a significant discount to students transitioning from personal to professional use. Contact us for details.

At the time of purchase, you must provide the name and email address of the student owner, and provide valid proof of student status for that student. The subscription must be registered to the student, and Mathematica must be installed on their personal computer. All communication regarding the subscription will be sent directly to the student, who owns the rights to and benefits of the subscription.

I will soon drop out of university. However, I will try to keep me busy with some research topics. For that I'll need a mathematica licence running on a single machine. I can currently buy a mathematica student version. I'm not quite sure what will happen when I drop out of university:

A correct answer to your question will require consultation with the administrator of your Mathematica license at your academic institution. Wolfram has a number of options licensing options available to academic end-users. I have experience with administering an academic site license and can provide some insights but you should speak with someone at your institution to get the correct answer.

Will I lose access to my mathematica version? Yes, eventually. Student licenses that allow the software to be installed on personal computers typically require annual renewal. The new key will be sent to your university email address. I assume you will lose access to that email address upon leaving the institution.

Is there a periodical check from Wolfram on my student status after say a year? Yes, for license options that include a home-use rider. A typical implementation is that a student creates an account on the Wolfram Portal that is linked to their institution's email address. Then the student version of the software will expire after one year, requiring the student to re-activate through the portal. As mentioned in the first question, if you cannot access the email account provided to you by your institution, you will not be able to access the activation key provided through the Wolfram Portal.

Note added in proof: As an example of licensing customization, this institution provides a decent discount allowing students to migrate their "free" student edition to a professional edition. As a license administrator, I was not able to offer this type of advantage to students at my institution.

I suggest you go with the Home version, so you can pursue your personal interests.The Home version costs a bit more (about 300 dollars), but has no time limits and when you upgrade the price is around 100 dollars. If you really discover and publish something spectacular - and you absolutely need MMA to demonstrate your results - then talk to WRI.

The student version is only valid until you are a student. This is clearly written in their website. Obviously you are not obliged to upgrade or change your license, but perhaps you will get an offer to change it to Home at some discounted price.

I need mathematica for my study of meteorlogy, so I'm going to buy the student version. Is it possible to install and use a Mathematica student edition on two PCs (notebook and desktop) with the same licence, like Adobe Creative Suite or Steam games?

I did it by updating the student and home edition to Premier service. Then, under "Benefits" you find the Use of of a second installation. I downloaded the Linux version for a second computer. Even for a second installation on a dual boot machine you need the second download and separate activation.

Of course, as expected, you have to renew the Primier service each year, For vs 13.0 Premier service was helpful because the Null version was a happening of of unexpected events. Thy gave me a special download adress to download a corrected version.

And if you don't see there a way to get an Activation Key for a Home license, do contact Wolfram customer service. Phone is best if you're in a position to do that. E-mail could take a couple of days.

If Premier Service indeed entitles you to a Home license in addition to the main Student license, then log into your User Portal and check out the list of products available to you. It's under the "My Products and Services" tab. You'll see your Student license there. click on it.

Thank you! I bought my Student license with Premier Service. After payment was succesful, I downloaded Mathematica and installed it on my PC (self-built highend desktop, Win 8.1 Pro), then I activated it via online activation and registered it in the Wolfram User Portal.

Then, I used a USB drive to get the downloaded Mathematica zip folder on my notebook (Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Carbon, Win 7 Pro), and installed it, which was succesful - but activation failed, because the system doesn't accept my activation key. What tho do now? As the description of Premier Service says, it's possible to install Mathematica on a second system, so the key should be accepted?

I suppose it is a matter of opinion whether to capitalize the "VERY" in 

your post. I personally think it is absurd to force the non-use of an FPU 

for MATHEMATICS software!! As we move into faster processor chips 

(particularly the powerpc) will we get pushed into the absurd situation of 

being forced to run the software in emulation mode? The NeXT academic 

community used to get the software INCLUDED with their computers however 

when they paid for "upgrades" suddenly their multiuser programs (the 

point of UNIX computing) suddenly had code inserted to force it to be 

single user.Deep breath.... I guess my point is I have severe philosophic problems 

with a company who intentionally cripples their software before selling 

it to educational organizations. In my opinion if Wolfram wants to sell 

less for less to education, I would BEG them to consider selling full 

speed software with smaller libraries. I'd say most, by far, of the 

academic users of Mathematica could get away with 25% of the capability 

of the program. I personally believe they would get far more market 

penetration in this manner.Back to your particular question, after using the PowerPC native version, 

there is NO WAY I would go back to a non-FPU version of any kind. It has 

to be 5-10 times faster.just my $.02

: Thanks in advance!My understanding is that if you purchase the student version, you can 

upgrade to the full-blown version for a fee. The total cost is still 

less than buying the full-blown version outright. : Kale Beckwitt

: ka...@uclink2.berkeley.edu

I have to say, your response to Kale's question has some problems. Most of them are in the second paragraph. To start, the Student Version of Mathematica is not what is sold to "educational orgainizations". In fact, universities typically own an enhanced versions site license for a mix of platforms. This is the case at the University of Illinois. The Student Version, as its name implies, is marketed towards the student.To claim that Wolfram Research has "intentionally crippled" the student version is absurd. The decision was to offer a lest costly product so that students, typically college ones, could afford the software. The lower price means lower performance. In this case, lack of coprocessor support."I'd say most, by far, of the academic users of Mathematica could get away with 25% of the capability" Again, I disagree. I, as a student, find myself using 50-60% of the packages on a regular basis. I have probably loaded closer to 80% of the packages, but rarely used some of them. To reduce the number of "libraries" doesn't make sense since they are readily available to any Mathematica user. You were right in one respect. The enhanced version is faster. 5-10 times faster, I don't think so. 4 times, in intesive calculations, probably. The student version will give the same results as any other version. Is it worth it to buy the student version vs the enhanced? I don' know. How impatient are you and how much do you have to spend? Your PowerPC is a great machine. Try running the Student Version on it, you'll be surprised by the results. 


etc etc...Hello? Gee, unless you want to do something UNUSUAL like NUMERICAL 

CALCULATIONS...(And what kind of mathematica user would have that in

mind....) And compare the native code version of mathematica running on a 

powerpc macintosh to a student version running under 68040 emulation on 

the same computer. That is NOT a 4 times slower. Wolfram's OWN 

ADVERTISING gives numbers like 17 seconds versus 109 seconds (on a Quadra 

700, presumably running an enhanced version...) For those with a new 

PowerMac check out the sample software from Wolfram on the CD sampler.Questions for WOLFRAM rep...(surly mode on...)1) Will there ever be a native (student) version of Mathematica for the 

 powerpc. Hypothetically, if there was no MacIntosh for sale powered 

 by something other than a power-pc would this be a factor in your 

 policy, or should we just be thankful that Mathematica wasn't first

 created in the 8088 era?

2) What will happen to the current user base when OS for Mac and INTEL 

 computers become multi-tasking? (Both mac and windows claim that is 

 coming within the next year.) Will you slip code into student version 

 which checks to see if there is a session already running? Is that code 

 already there?As an aside, I have been using Mathematica while teaching my high school 

math (and computing) courses since 1988-89. I am the leading proponent of 

increasing computer use, specifically Mathematica, at my current school - 

Choate Rosemary Hall. While visiting Middlesex academy for a school 

recertification visit last week, I noticed that Mathematica was installed 

but virtually unused on their computers. (Note of interest, Middlesex and 

Choate have both been listed in ads from Wolfram..)I am becoming the math department chair at a third school, Kinkaid in 

Houston Texas. I would very much like to continue working with 

Mathematica there, but there is no way I will pay more than $200 per 

license and, on principle, no way I would purchase any mathematics 

software which has intentionally been crippled so as not to make use of 

either an advanced processor or an FPU. Honestly, the only way I would 

recommend purchasing Mathematica would be to purchase used NeXT 

workstations which include an academic license.Wolfram must realize that they have almost ZERO penetration of the 

(fairly) large high school market. I firmly believe that their bottom 

line would be increased significantly if they came out with a 

"Mathematica lite" version which used a kernal which actually fits onto a 

8 meg computer. Provide the full processing speed and let the schools 

purchase more libraries as they decide they need them.As for me, MathCad is offered for $49 with the Maple libraries. I don't 

want to learn a new environment, but I suppose it isn't out of the 

question either. It's too bad. I've carried a torch for Mathematica for a 

very long time. 152ee80cbc

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