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The MIT
Artificial intelligence Laboratory is an
interdisciplinary research entity at MIT founded in 1959, and of the most influential and
accomplished in the field. The AI Lab (as it is commonly abbreviated) was originally a subdivision of Project MAC. In 2003, the AI Lab was merged with the Laboratory for Computer Science, another
Project MAC descendant, to form CSAIL.
Founders included Professor Marvin Minsky, John McCarthy (who invented Lisp) and a talented community of
computer programmers. In the 1950s - 1970s, they shared a computer room with a computer (initially a PDP-6, and later a PDP-10) for which they built a time-sharing operating system called ITS.
Talented programmers such as Richard Stallman, who used TECO to write EMACS, flourished in this environment.
The AI Lab is currently interested principally in the problems of vision, mechanical motion and manipulation, and language,
which they view as the keys to more intelligent machines.
See also: History of operating
systems
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