Release History
Starting with LabVIEW 8.0, a minor release is released around the first week of August to coincide with the National Instruments conference NI Week, followed by a bug-fix release in February. In 2009 National Instruments names the releases after the year in which they are released. The bug-fix is called a Service Pack (for instance the 2009 service pack 1 is released in February 2010).
Name/Version | Build Number | Date |
---|---|---|
LabVIEW project begins | April 1983 | |
LabVIEW 1.0 (for Macintosh) | ?? | October 1986 |
LabVIEW 2.0 | ?? | January 1990 |
LabVIEW 2.5 (first release for Sun & Windows) | ?? | August 1992 |
LabVIEW 3.0 (Multiplatform) | ?? | July 1993 |
LabVIEW 3.0.1 (first release for Windows NT) | ?? | 1994 |
LabVIEW 3.1 | ?? | 1994 |
LabVIEW 3.1.1 (first release with "application builder" capability) | ?? | 1995 |
LabVIEW 4.0 | ?? | April 1996 |
LabVIEW 4.1 | ?? | 1997 |
LabVIEW 5.0 | ?? | February 1998 |
LabVIEW RT (Real Time) | ?? | May 1999 |
LabVIEW 6.0 (6i) | 6.0.0.4005 | 7/26/2000 |
LabVIEW 6.1 | 6.1.0.4004 | 12/4/2001 |
LabVIEW 7.0 (Express) | 7.0.0.4000 | April 2003 |
LabVIEW PDA module first released | ?? | May 2003 |
LabVIEW FPGA module first released | ?? | June 2003 |
LabVIEW 7.1 | ?? | 2004 |
LabVIEW Embedded module first released | ?? | May 2005 |
LabVIEW 8.0 | ?? | September 2005 |
LabVIEW 8.20 (native Object Oriented Programming) | ?? | August 2006 |
LabVIEW 8.2.1 | 8.2.1.4002 | 2/21/2007 |
LabVIEW 8.5 | 8.5.0.4002 | 2007 |
LabVIEW 8.6 | 8.6.0.4001 | 7/24/2008 |
LabVIEW 8.6.1 | 8.6.0.4001 | 12/10/2008 |
LabVIEW 2009 (32 and 64-bit) | 9.0.0.4022 | 8/4/2009 |
LabVIEW 2009 SP2 | 9.0.1.4011 | 1/8/2010 |
LabVIEW 2010 | 10.0.0.4032 | 8/4/2010 |
LabVIEW 2010 f2 | 10.0.0.4033 | 9/16/2010 |
LabVIEW 2010 SP1 | 10.0.1.4004 | 5/17/2011 |
LabVIEW for LEGO MINDSTORMS (2010 SP1) | August 2011 | |
LabVIEW 2011 | 11.0.0.4029 | 6/22/2011 |
LabVIEW 2011 SP1 | 11.0.1.4015 | 3/1/2012 |
LabVIEW 2012 | ?? | August 2012 |
Read more about this topic: LabVIEW
Famous quotes containing the words release and/or history:
“Come, thou long-expected Jesus,
born to set thy people free;
from our fears and sins release us,
let us find our rest in thee.”
—Charles Wesley (17071788)
“In the history of the human mind, these glowing and ruddy fables precede the noonday thoughts of men, as Aurora the suns rays. The matutine intellect of the poet, keeping in advance of the glare of philosophy, always dwells in this auroral atmosphere.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)