Skip to content
In 1962, a programmer at Librascope, a California-based defense contractor, announced that “a computer can be programmed to write meaningful and relevant sentences in proper English.” At Librascope’s Laboratory for Automata Research, in Glendale, he’d started out by feeding into his computer—the vacuum-tube LGP-30—a vocabulary of thirty-five hundred words and a repertoire of a hundred and twenty-e...
The Prehistory of A.I. Slop | Huntaegis