Rosenblatt’s Mark I Perceptron
tech
coding
useful-tools
deep-learning
technology
deeplearning
I learned about Rosenblatt’s Mark I Perceptron, the 1958 machine that pioneered artificial neural networks and how Minsky and Papert’s critique inadvertently triggered the first AI winter.
I’ve now read a little about Rosenblatt’s Perceptron in two different places: in the Howard/Gugger Deep Learning book, and also in Cade Metz’ Genius Makers.

Built in 1958, it is usually described as the first machine which was based on the principle of the artificial neutron. It used a single layer in this initial configuration, and even in that simple way you could already see glimpses of where it might go.
Unfortunately, Marvin Minsky and Seymour Papert’s apparently perceptive but also damning assessment of the perceptron as a technology without a future ushered in the first of the so-called ‘AI winters’, and the idea of using neural networks was buried for several years.
Thankfully, some ignored the herd and stuck with it.