Jmp Version History _verified_ Today

| 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 |

Since its debut in 1989, JMP (pronounced "jump") has evolved from a niche Macintosh tool into a powerhouse of interactive statistical discovery. Developed by John Sall and a team at SAS, JMP was designed to transform data analysis from a static, batch-processed chore into a dynamic, visual exploration. The Formative Years (1989–1990s) jmp version history

In the beginning, there was the mainframe. Data lived in cold, blinking rooms, and to speak with it, you had to learn the ancient tongues of SAS, Fortran, or JCL. Graphics were an afterthought, a line of asterisks printed on green-bar paper. | Version | Release Year | Platform |

When Dr. Ana Reyes opened JMP for the first time in 1991, the interface felt like a new language: boxes and menus that promised to turn raw numbers into patterns. She learned to listen to it—hovering over scatterplots as if they might whisper secrets, dragging a slider and watching a regression line bow to the shape of her curiosity. The Formative Years (1989–1990s) In the beginning, there