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Greenblatt is born in Oregon. He would later become one of the most influential early computer hackers. -
He enters the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he discovers programming and the early hacker culture. -
Greenblatt joins TMRC, the birthplace of the hacker mindset, and begins experimenting with early electronics and computing systems. -
Greenblatt begins working with the PDP‑6 at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, where he learns low-level system programming and helps build foundational tools for the lab. -
At the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Richard Greenblatt becomes deeply involved in the Lisp programming language. He helps develop the dialect known as MacLisp running on the PDP-6, contributing to its evolution. -
Greenblatt begins developing Mac Hack VI on the PDP‑6 at MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. This program would become the first computer chess program to compete in a human tournament. -
Mac Hack VI becomes the first computer program in history to enter an official human chess tournament. This marks a turning point in artificial intelligence, proving that a machine could play competitively against trained human opponents. -
The chess program Mac Hack VI, developed by Richard Greenblatt at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, becomes the first computer program to beat a human participant in a rated chess tournament. -
By 1970, Richard Greenblatt is widely recognized as one of the leading figures at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Known for his nonstop hands-on programming, open-access philosophy, and willingness to help others, he becomes a core architect of early hacker culture. His work influences the norms, values, and identity of the MIT hacker community for decades. -
Greenblatt helps develop ITS, the operating system used by MIT hackers. His work supports the open, collaborative culture of the AI Lab. -
Greenblatt becomes known for promoting the hacker ethic: open access, curiosity, and freedom to explore systems. -
Greenblatt starts building computer hardware optimized for the Lisp language at MIT, paving the way for the first Lisp machines. -
Greenblatt starts LMI, the company created to build and sell commercial Lisp Machines. -
Computers from Lisp Machines Incorporated (LMI) and other Lisp machine makers become important tools in AI labs and commercial research. -
Greenblatt is acknowledged as one of the earliest and most influential figures in hacker culture and AI programming, shaping how programmers think about openness and exploration.