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  2. Space-cadet keyboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space-cadet_keyboard

    The space-cadet keyboard is a keyboard designed by John L. Kulp in 1978 and used on Lisp machines at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), [2][3][4] which inspired several still-current jargon terms [citation needed] in the field of computer science and influenced the design of Emacs. It was inspired by the Knight keyboard, which was ...

  3. Lisp machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp_machine

    The Symbolics machine was competitive against many commercial super minicomputers, but was never adapted for conventional purposes. The Symbolics Lisp Machines were also sold to some non-AI markets like computer graphics, modeling, and animation. The MIT-derived Lisp machines ran a Lisp dialect named Lisp Machine Lisp, descended from MIT's ...

  4. Symbolics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolics

    Symbolics was a spinoff from the MIT AI Lab, one of two companies to be founded by AI Lab staffers and associated hackers for the purpose of manufacturing Lisp machines. The other was Lisp Machines, Inc., although Symbolics attracted most of the hackers, and more funding. Symbolics' initial product, the LM-2, introduced in 1981, was a ...

  5. Lisp Machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp_Machines

    Lisp Machines, Inc. Lisp Machines, Inc. was a company formed in 1979 by Richard Greenblatt of MIT 's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory to build Lisp machines. It was based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. By 1979, the Lisp Machine Project at MIT, originated and headed by Greenblatt, had constructed over 30 CADR computers for various projects at MIT.

  6. David A. Moon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_A._Moon

    When Symbolics was founded in 1980 to commercialize the Lisp Machine, he became one of its founders. He continued to develop new hardware and software at Symbolics, and was listed as a Symbolics Fellow in 1989, but left the company in 1990 to join a project to develop a new operating system. He also made important contributions to the ...

  7. Genera (operating system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genera_(operating_system)

    Genera is a commercial operating system and integrated development environment for Lisp machines created by Symbolics.It is essentially a fork of an earlier operating system originating on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) AI Lab's Lisp machines which Symbolics had used in common with Lisp Machines, Inc. (LMI), and Texas Instruments (TI).

  8. Richard Stallman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Stallman

    As a hacker in MIT's AI laboratory, Stallman worked on software projects like TECO and Emacs for the Incompatible Timesharing System (ITS), as well as the Lisp machine operating system (the CONS of 1974–1976 and the CADR of 1977–1979—this latter unit was commercialized by Symbolics and Lisp Machines, Inc. (LMI) starting around 1980). [17]

  9. History of the graphical user interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_graphical...

    Lisp machines originally developed at MIT and later commercialized by Symbolics and other manufacturers, were early high-end single user computer workstations with advanced graphical user interfaces, windowing, and mouse as an input device. First workstations from Symbolics came to market in 1981, with more advanced designs in the subsequent years.