Jmp Version History Info

| Version | Release Year | Platform | Key Innovation | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1.0 | 1989 | Mac only | Dynamic graphics & brushing | | 2.0 | 1991 | Mac only | Design of Experiments (DOE) | | 3.0 | 1995 | Mac only | JMP Scripting Language (JSL) beta | | 4.0 | 2002 | Mac & Win | Windows port; SAS integration | | 5.0 | 2003 | Cross-platform | PCA & Multivariate improvements | | 6.0 | 2005 | Cross-platform | JMP Genomics module | | 7.0 | 2007 | Cross-platform | Modern Graph Builder & Profiler | | 8.0 | 2009 | Cross-platform | JMP Journal (shareable reports) | | 9.0 | 2010 | Cross-platform | R Integration | | 10.0 | 2012 | Cross-platform | JMP Pro edition & Generalized Reg. | | 11.0 | 2014 | Cross-platform | Mixture Designs & Model comparison | | 12.0 | 2015 | Cross-platform | Functional Data Explorer | | 13.0 | 2016 | Cross-platform | Query Builder (SQL GUI) | | 14.0 | 2018 | Cross-platform | GPU Accelerated ML | | 15.0 | 2019 | Cross-platform | Python Integration & JMP Live | | 16.0 | 2021 | Cross-platform | Workflow Builder (Auditing) | | 17.0 | 2022 | Cross-platform | Sample Size Explorers | | 18.0 | 2023 | Cross-platform | JMP Assist (AI) & Formula Depot |

In the world of statistical discovery, JMP (pronounced "jump") has carved out a unique niche since 1989. Unlike the command-line rigor of SAS or the package-heavy sprawl of R, JMP has always championed dynamic visualization and interactive exploration. Reviewing its version history is akin to watching the democratization of data analysis unfold—one linked brush and red triangle at a time. jmp version history

JMP 1.0 (1989) launched exclusively for Macintosh. Developed by John Sall (co-founder of SAS Institute) and a small team, it was a radical idea: a statistical package built from the ground up for graphical user interfaces. The hallmark feature was dynamic brushing—clicking a point in a scatterplot highlighted it in all other open graphs. For the era, this was magic. | Version | Release Year | Platform |

JMP 2.0 (1991) added survival analysis and the beginnings of design of experiments (DOE). JMP 3.0 (1994) brought the "JMP Journal," a reproducible report format that saved graphs and scripts together—decades ahead of modern notebooks. Verdict: These versions were niche but visionary

Verdict: These versions were niche but visionary. Mac-based statisticians loved them; everyone else was still writing SAS code.