Difference between revisions of "Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory"
m (→External links: +SAIL DECsystem-10/20 Hardware Manual) |
m (Fix Super Foonly link; retrieve linked page from the Internet Archive) |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
It was founded in 1963 by John McCarthy, and was initially housed in the D. C. Power building (named after a person, Donald Clinton Power, not [[direct current|D. C. power]]), located in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, over the campus. | It was founded in 1963 by John McCarthy, and was initially housed in the D. C. Power building (named after a person, Donald Clinton Power, not [[direct current|D. C. power]]), located in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, over the campus. | ||
− | + | In 1980, SAIL was shut down as an independent institution; the remains of the Lab were merged into Stanford's Computer Science Department. The remnants moved out of the famed D. C. Power building, leaving [[CCRMA]] behind, and moved into the CS Department's location in Margaret Jacks Hall on the main campus. | |
− | + | SAIL was re-opened as an independent entity in 2004. | |
− | SAIL was | + | Although focused on AI work, on which it achieved much, SAIL made a number of significant contributions to computer science generally; one was that SAIL was the first institution which provided a [[video terminal]] in everyone's office. (Several SAIL alumni were part of the revolution in [[user interface]]s at [[Xerox PARC]].) Another notable one was one of the very first [[computer-aided design|CAD]] systems, [[Stanford University Design System|SUDS]], done as part of the later-terminated [[Super Foonly]] project at SAIL. |
+ | |||
+ | ==Computing resources== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Throughout most of its early life, SAIL principally used [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] [[PDP-10]] machines, running their own [[WAITS]] [[time-sharing]] [[operating system]]. They started with a [[PDP-6]]; later, a [[KA10]] was added (eventually equipped with a [[BBN Pager]]); finally a [[KL10]] (received in trade for the design engineering for the Super Foonly, which became the basis of the KL10) became the main machine. | ||
==File repository== | ==File repository== | ||
− | From 1972 to 1990, the [[file]]s on the SAIL | + | From 1972 to 1990, the [[file]]s on the SAIL PDP-10 were regularly backed up onto [[magnetic tape]]s, which were carefully saved and stored. By the end of SAIL's (first) life, these amounted to almost 3,000 low-density, 7-track tapes. These were carefully copied onto a final set of 229 reels of high-density 9-track magnetic tape, in a project that completed in 1990. In 1998, the contents were copied again, onto other media, and a project, SAILDART, was started to make them publicly available over the [[Internet]]. SAILDART is "a digital archive promulgating records from SAIL"; it is now available (see links below). |
{{semi-stub}} | {{semi-stub}} | ||
+ | <!-- ==See also== | ||
− | + | * [[]] | |
− | + | --> | |
− | * [[ | ||
− | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
− | * [https://forum.stanford.edu/wiki/index.php/Early_Computers_at_Stanford#Stanford_Artificial_Intelligence_Lab_.281965_to_1979.29 Early Computers at Stanford] | + | * [https://web.archive.org/web/20220729235053/https://forum.stanford.edu/wiki/index.php/Early_Computers_at_Stanford#Stanford_Artificial_Intelligence_Lab_.281965_to_1979.29 Early Computers at Stanford] |
− | * [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/stanford/sail/SAILON-75A_DECsystem-1020_Hardware_Manual_DEC-10-XSRMA-D_Jan77.pdf DECsystem-10/20 Hardware Manual] - contains details on changes to SAIL's PDP-6 and -10's | + | * [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/stanford/sail/ SAIL] - documents at [[Bitsavers]] |
− | * [http://web.archive.org/web/20120515090608/www.stanford.edu/~learnest/sailaway.htm SAIL Away] (archived copy) | + | ** [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/stanford/sail/SAILON-75A_DECsystem-1020_Hardware_Manual_DEC-10-XSRMA-D_Jan77.pdf DECsystem-10/20 Hardware Manual] - an appendix in this copy (pp. 227-241 of the PDF) contains details on changes to SAIL's PDP-6 and -10's |
+ | * [http://web.archive.org/web/20120515090608/www.stanford.edu/~learnest/sailaway.htm SAIL Away] (archived copy) - contains much SAIL history | ||
+ | * [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/stanford/sail/Les_Earnest/Sail_Away.txt SAIL Away] - a later, slightly more up to date version | ||
+ | * [https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~aj/archives/docs/all/140.pdf Nine Months of Labour at SAIL] - a short report on a sabbatical at SAIL in 1979 | ||
* [https://saildart.org/ SAILDART] | * [https://saildart.org/ SAILDART] | ||
** [https://saildart.org/simple/ About SAIL DART ● ORG] | ** [https://saildart.org/simple/ About SAIL DART ● ORG] | ||
Line 31: | Line 37: | ||
[[Category: Research Organizations]] | [[Category: Research Organizations]] | ||
+ | [[Category: PDP-10 Users]] |
Latest revision as of 15:38, 9 November 2024
The Stanford Artifical Intelligence Laboratory (often known as the Stanford AI Lab, or SAIL for short) was an influential early computer science research organization, at Stanford University.
It was founded in 1963 by John McCarthy, and was initially housed in the D. C. Power building (named after a person, Donald Clinton Power, not D. C. power), located in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, over the campus.
In 1980, SAIL was shut down as an independent institution; the remains of the Lab were merged into Stanford's Computer Science Department. The remnants moved out of the famed D. C. Power building, leaving CCRMA behind, and moved into the CS Department's location in Margaret Jacks Hall on the main campus.
SAIL was re-opened as an independent entity in 2004.
Although focused on AI work, on which it achieved much, SAIL made a number of significant contributions to computer science generally; one was that SAIL was the first institution which provided a video terminal in everyone's office. (Several SAIL alumni were part of the revolution in user interfaces at Xerox PARC.) Another notable one was one of the very first CAD systems, SUDS, done as part of the later-terminated Super Foonly project at SAIL.
Computing resources
Throughout most of its early life, SAIL principally used DEC PDP-10 machines, running their own WAITS time-sharing operating system. They started with a PDP-6; later, a KA10 was added (eventually equipped with a BBN Pager); finally a KL10 (received in trade for the design engineering for the Super Foonly, which became the basis of the KL10) became the main machine.
File repository
From 1972 to 1990, the files on the SAIL PDP-10 were regularly backed up onto magnetic tapes, which were carefully saved and stored. By the end of SAIL's (first) life, these amounted to almost 3,000 low-density, 7-track tapes. These were carefully copied onto a final set of 229 reels of high-density 9-track magnetic tape, in a project that completed in 1990. In 1998, the contents were copied again, onto other media, and a project, SAILDART, was started to make them publicly available over the Internet. SAILDART is "a digital archive promulgating records from SAIL"; it is now available (see links below).
External links
- Early Computers at Stanford
- SAIL - documents at Bitsavers
- DECsystem-10/20 Hardware Manual - an appendix in this copy (pp. 227-241 of the PDF) contains details on changes to SAIL's PDP-6 and -10's
- SAIL Away (archived copy) - contains much SAIL history
- SAIL Away - a later, slightly more up to date version
- Nine Months of Labour at SAIL - a short report on a sabbatical at SAIL in 1979
- SAILDART
- About SAIL DART ● ORG
- SAILDART Archive Preview
- SAILDART - also contains a good summary history of SAIL
- SAILDART Prolegomenon - lengthy; a Table of Contents is on pp. 140-144 of the PDF