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Timeline The evolution of chatbot technology
TIMELINE
The evolution of chatbot technology
With evolving artificial intelligence technology, chatbots are becoming smarter and faster. Technology Magazine looks at the history of chatbot technology, from the 1960s up to the most recent developments
1966 ELIZA
The first chatbot, ELIZA, was created by MIT professor Joseph Weizenbaum. It used pattern matching and substitution methodology to simulate conversation, and was intended to mimic human conversation. ELIZA could not converse with true understanding, but many early users were convinced of ELIZA's intelligence, despite Weizenbaum's insistence to the contrary.
1995 A.L.I.C.E
Inspired by ELIZA, A.L.I.C.E. was a natural language processing chatbot that engaged in a conversation with a human. The program simulated chatting with a real person over the internet and could tell a user its age, hobbies and other fascinating facts, as well as answering the user’s dialogue.
1992 Dr Sbaitso
Created for MS-Dos, Dr Sbaitso was one of the earliest efforts of incorporating AI into a chatbot. Distributed with various sound cards manufactured by Creative Technology, the program "conversed" with the user as if it were a psychologist and was designed to showcase voices the cards were able to produce.
2001 Smarterchild 2010 Siri
Developed by ActiveBuddy, Smarterchild was available on AOL IM and MSN Messenger and could carry out fun conversations with quick data access to other services. It became very popular with users, attracting over 30 million Instant Messenger "buddies" on AIM (AOL), MSN and Yahoo Messenger over the course of its lifetime.
Formed by Apple for iOS in 2010, Siri is an intelligent personal assistant and learning navigator that uses a natural language UI that became the blueprint system for all AI bots and PAs after that. It paved a way for other similar tools including Google Assistant, launched in 2012, and Microsoft’s Cortana and Amazon’s Alexa, both launched in 2014.
2022 LaMDA
Google launches an app that lets users interact with its Lamda AI. The company began allowing users to download and register for the AI Test Kitchen App, using a Google account on either Android or Apple devices. First revealed in May, it lets users chat with LaMDA in a rolling set of test demos.