David Silver (roboticist)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

David Silver was a student at

MIT in the early 1970s, who was the primary developer of the Silver Arm, an improved robotic arm which was used for experimenting in mechanisms for fine motor control using motions similar to human hand and finger movements.[1]

While still a high school student, prior to enrolling at MIT, Silver had frequented the

hackers, who picked him up as a 'mascot' of their group. According to Steven Levy's book Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, his presence at the lab, and his being allowed to work on independent robotics projects, became a source of friction between the nascent Hacker group and the project's administrators.[2]

See also

  • L. Peter Deutsch, another early MIT hacker who began with the Project MAC group's computers as a teen before enrolling at MIT, and who went on to develop several important software systems such as Ghostscript
  • Lisp Machine
    projects.

References

  1. ^ "MIT Silver Arm, 1974". Timeline of Computer History. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
  2. .