LM-2
1981 · ~$70,000
The commercialized MIT CADR. Symbolics' opening move — a hand-wired interim machine for the labs that simply could not wait.
SYMBOLICS , INC. · CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS · EST. 1980
A NEW ERA OF INTELLIGENT COMPUTING
The machine that thought in (parentheses).
The single-user workstation with the processing power of a mainframe —
hand-built for the people who were building the future of artificial intelligence.
In 1980, a band of hackers walked out of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and decided to sell the future.
The result was the Symbolics 3600 Symbol Processing System: not a number cruncher, but a knowledge engine. Where ordinary computers shuffled bytes, the LISP machine reasoned about symbols — ideas, relationships, programs that wrote programs. It was, in the language of the era, a machine for artificial intelligence, expert systems, robotics, image understanding, language translation, and VLSI design.
Every Symbolics was a complete world. From the microcode up, it ran a single language — LISP — and a single, seamless environment in which the operating system, the editor, the compiler, the debugger, and your program were all the same living, inspectable thing. Nothing was hidden. Everything was source. You could reach in and change the machine while it ran.
Fifteen years of hand-tuned hardware, from the refrigerator-sized 3600 to a Lisp processor etched onto a single chip. These were not cheap. They were not supposed to be.
1981 · ~$70,000
The commercialized MIT CADR. Symbolics' opening move — a hand-wired interim machine for the labs that simply could not wait.
1983 · the "refrigerator"
The first all-Symbolics design and the icon of the line. Writable control store, hardware-assisted garbage collection, demand-paged virtual memory, and a 68000 just to run the front panel. The 3640, 3670 and 3675 followed — workhorses of a generation of AI labs.
1987 · a Lisp machine on a chip
~390,000 transistors of pure symbolic processing. A 40-bit tagged architecture addressing 4 gigawords, microcoded in on-chip ROM, running 3–5× the speed of the 3600 — and small enough to drop onto a board.
1988–1992
The Ivory went everywhere: a NuBus board that turned a Macintosh II into a Lisp machine (MacIvory I/II/III), the standalone XL400 and blazing XL1200 workstations, UX boards for Sun, and the headless NXP1000 server.
The operating system that was also a programming environment that was also your document that was also itself. Written entirely in Lisp, from the microcode up.
Everything on screen was a typed object, not pixels. Click any result — a file, a process, a number — and the system knew what it was and what you could do with it. The presentation-based interface that the rest of computing is still catching up to.
No wall between the OS and your code. The whole system was source, loaded into one shared space, fully inspectable and fully editable — while running. Break a function at 3am? The debugger handed you a live stack you could rewrite in place.
Thousands of pages of documentation, fully hyperlinked, years before the Web. Every symbol in the manual was alive and cross-referenced. Hypertext, shipping in a box.
ZetaLisp and Symbolics Common Lisp, plus Flavors — one of the first object systems, with message passing and multiple inheritance. The ideas here seeded CLOS and modern OOP.
Seven modifier keys. Greek letters printed on the front faces. Roman numerals for menu choices. The most maximalist keyboard ever shipped — and the reason your editor still says Meta.
Designed by John L. Kulp in 1978 and descended from Tom Knight's keyboard, the Space-Cadet gave you Control, Meta, Super, and Hyper — the four "bucky bits" — so you could fire off chords no other machine could even name. When Emacs needed a modifier, it borrowed Meta from here. On your laptop today, Alt stands in its place.
From a Westwood office a stone's throw from Hollywood, the Symbolics Graphics Division built the tools that taught computers to move: S-Geometry, S-Dynamics, S-Render, and S-Paint.
This is where the early-3D dream lived. In 1986, an SGD engineer named Craig Reynolds built a little program on top of S-Geometry and S-Dynamics that simulated a flock of birds. He called them boids. Three simple rules — separation, alignment, cohesion — and suddenly a swarm felt alive.
The demo, "Stanley and Stella in: Breaking the Ice," premiered at SIGGRAPH 1987 and stunned the room. Six years later those same flocking rules drove the bat swarms and penguin armies of Batman Returns — the first feature film to put boids on the big screen. The Symbolics machine didn't just think. It dreamed in motion.
The division was later sold to Nichimen and its tools lived on as N-World and Mirai — the lineage that would help animate Gollum.
The first .com domain ever registered. Before Amazon, before Google,
before the Web itself, the LISP-machine company planted the very first flag in commercial cyberspace.
bbn.com would follow six weeks later. think.com, mcc.com, and dec.com rounded out the first five. For one shining moment, the future of the internet was written in parentheses.
Most people only read about the legend.
You keep it running.
The refrigerators, the keyboards, the parentheses — you saved them all.
So here's a little piece of the internet, registered just for you. Happy Birthday.
(welcome-home 'you) → T
When the AI winter came, the refrigerators went cold.
Cheaper Unix workstations flooded in. DARPA money dried up. By 1993 Symbolics was in Chapter 11, and the most beautiful single-user computers ever made became museum pieces and basement legends.
But ask anyone who used one. In The UNIX-HATERS Handbook, the LISP machine is mourned as the lost "Right Thing" — a coherent, humane, inspectable world that we traded away for something merely cheap. The reverence never faded. It only deepened.
The dream still boots. Open Genera ported the whole environment to a virtual Lisp machine, and Portable Genera (2021) now runs Genera on modern x86-64 and Apple Silicon — Linux and macOS alike. You can pull a chair up to a 1986 AI workstation tonight.