


modifying the Software in any manner, except those portions written in the Wolfram Language and included as examples decompiling, disassembling or reverse engineering the Software directly or indirectly using the Product for commercial purposes author and distribute Computable Document Format™ (CDF) files consistent with any associated licensing terms.Īll uses of the Software and other elements of the Product not specifically stated in the Permitted Uses and Installations section of this Agreement or otherwise set forth in alternative or supplemental license agreements or terms of use are prohibited, including, without limitation: maintain one archival copy of the Software on storage media and Subject to the terms of this Agreement and Your acceptance thereof, WRI grants You a non-exclusive license to use the Product solely for personal or educational purposes on a Model A or Model B Raspberry Pi computer. Point being that out of every OS you mentioned, exactly 1 of them qualifies and the rest do not (despite having anti-user/anti-competitive practices)įrom the Rpi Mathematica bundle license agreement: MacOS isn't entirely a walled garden despite getting pretty close (kinda like a worse dev/install experience from windows + *nix). Regardless of how annoying it is, there is no financial/legal barrier to building software for windows and you can trivially install 3rd party software or even execute it without installing.Īndroid I somewhat agree is a walled garden in practice (certain features are limited to gApp/play store apps only and setting up 3rd party play stores or apps is annoying) but by the simple fact that you can build apps for android or install them without any financial or legal barriers, it can't realistically be called a walled garden (maybe a hedge maze might be more accurate). It can be done for free & legally but it's a significant pain in the ass. It is far harder to get a "standard" build environment up for windows simply because Microsoft refuses to distribute the UCRT (or VSRedist) build libraries in a form that doesn't require manually digging through installer internals or setting up Visual Studio.

Windows is also not a walled garden but to a lesser degree than Linux. You can always install new software by building it from source or often from just downloading something someone else built (as long as it's statically linked or you have the shared libs). Linux distros are not by any means walled gardens.
