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| 1956 || The name ''artificial intelligence'' is used for the first time as the topic of the second [[Dartmouth Conferences|Dartmouth Conference]], organized by [[John McCarthy (computer scientist)|John McCarthy]]<ref>Crevier 1993:148–150</ref>
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| 1956 || The first demonstration of the [[Logic Theorist]] (LT) written by [[Allen Newell]], [[Cliff Shaw|J.C. Shaw]] and [[Herbert A. Simon]] ([[Carnegie Institute of Technology]], now [[Carnegie Mellon University] or CMU]). This is often called the first AI program, though Samuel's checkers program also has a strong claim.
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| 1957 || The [[General Problem Solver]] (GPS) demonstrated by Newell, Shaw and Simon while at CMU.
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| 1958 || John McCarthy ([[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] or MIT) invented the [[Lisp programming language]].
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| 2007 || [[Checkers]] is [[solved game|solved]] by a team of researchers at the [[University of Alberta]].
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| 2007 || [[DARPA]] launches the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DARPA_Grand_Challenge#2007_Urban_Challenge|Urban Challenge]] for [[autonomous cars]] to obey traffic rules and operate in an urban environment.
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| 2009 || [[Google]] builds [[Self-driving car|self driving car]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Fisher|first=Adam|title=Inside Google's Quest To Popularize Self-Driving Cars|url=http://www.popsci.com/cars/article/2013-09/google-self-driving-car|work=Popular Science|publisher=Bonnier Corporation|accessdate=10 October 2013}}</ref>
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