Computer characters: Difference between revisions
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(Add three Blake's 7 computers. -- Ralph Corderoy.) |
(Adding Jarvis from Ironman to the list.) |
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* Hactar (The Hitchhikers Guide) | * Hactar (The Hitchhikers Guide) | ||
* Hal (2001 [Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic, HAL 9000]) | * Hal (2001 [Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic, HAL 9000]) | ||
* Jarvis (Iron Man) | |||
* Joshua (War Games) | * Joshua (War Games) | ||
* K9 (Doctor Who) | * K9 (Doctor Who) |
Revision as of 06:32, 5 July 2011
Computers, robots and other artifial intelligence characters from science-fiction:
- Alfie (Barbarella 1968)
- Brianbrain (Space 1999)
- C3po (Star Wars)
- Colossus (The Forbin Project)
- Continuity (Mona Lisa Overdrive)
- Data (Startrek)
- Deepthought (The Hitchhikers Guide)
- Dixieflatline (Neuromancer)
- Domino (Michaelmas)
- Emmerac (Desk Set)
- Fuckup (Illuminatus [First Universal Cybernetic Kinetic Ultramicro Programmer])
- Giskard (The Robots of Dawn [R. Giskard Reventlov])
- Guardian (The Forbin Project)
- Hactar (The Hitchhikers Guide)
- Hal (2001 [Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic, HAL 9000])
- Jarvis (Iron Man)
- Joshua (War Games)
- K9 (Doctor Who)
- Kitt (Knight Rider [Knight Industries Two Thousand])
- Landru (Star Trek, the original serie)
- Markiv
- Matrix
- Mcp (TRON [Master Control Program])
- Mentalis (Doctor Who)
- Multitronic5 (Star Trek, the original serie)
- Multivac (The Last Question)
- Microvac (The Last Question)
- Muthr (Alien)
- Mother (Dark Star)
- Mycroft Holmes, or "Mike" (The Moon is a Harsh Mistress)
- Neuromancer (Neuromancer)
- Nomad (Star Trek, the original series)
- Novac
- Olivaw
- Orac (Blake's 7)
- Oracle
- Proteus (Demon Seed)
- R2d2 (Star Wars)
- ROK (Airplane II: The Sequel, 1982)
- Sal (2010)
- Skynet (Terminator)
- Slave (Blake's 7)
- Tron (TRON)
- Vicki (I, Robot)
- Vger (Star Trek I)
- Wintermute (Neuromancer)
- Wopr (War Games [War Operation Plan Response])
- Zark (TRON)
- Zen (Blake's 7)
- Ziggy (Quantum Leap)
- Abulafia ("Foucault pendulum" by Umberto Eco, named after a medieval jewish philosopher)
- EPICAC (after a namesake short story by Kurt Vonnegut)