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The [[Texas Instruments]] company in 1995 released the [[TI-92]] calculator with a CAS based on the software [[Derive computer algebra system|Derive]]; the [[TI-Nspire series]] replaced Derive in 2007. The [[TI-89 series]], first released in 1998, also contains a CAS.
The first popular computer algebra
As of today,{{when|date=October 2016}} the most popular commercial systems are [[Wolfram Mathematica]]<ref>[http://history.siam.org/oralhistories/gonnet.htm Interview with Gaston Gonnet, co-creator of Maple] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071229044836/http://history.siam.org/oralhistories/gonnet.htm |date=2007-12-29 }}, SIAM History of Numerical Analysis and Computing, March 16, 2005.</ref> and [[Maple (software)|Maple]], which are commonly used by research mathematicians, scientists, and engineers. Freely available alternatives include [[SageMath]] (which can act as a [[Front and back ends|front-end]] to several other free and nonfree CAS). Other significant significant systems include [[axiom (computer algebra system)|Axiom]], [[Maxima (software)|Maxima]], [[Magma (computer algebra system)|Magma]], and [[SageMath]].
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