1950s •
Mr. Kelso, depicted in episode "The Machine That Could Plot Crimes" of
Adventures of Superman (1953) •
To Hare Is Human, Wile E. Coyote, Super Genius uses a UNIVAC to help him catch Bugs Bunny
Warner Brothers (1956)
1960s •
The Machine, a computer built to specifications received in a radio transmission from an alien intelligence beyond our galaxy in the BBC seven-part TV series
A for Andromeda by
Fred Hoyle (1961) •
Old Man in the Cave, a computer that determines which pre-war foods are safe to eat for a post-apocalyptic town in
The Twilight Zone episode, "
The Old Man in the Cave" (1963) •
Batcomputer, large punched card mainframe depicted in the television series
Batman, introduced by series producers
William Dozier and
Howie Horwitz (1964) •
Agnes, a computer that gives romance advice to a computer technician, from the
The Twilight Zone episode "
From Agnes—With Love" (1964) •
WOTAN (Will Operating Thought Analogue), from the
Doctor Who serial "
The War Machines" (1966) •
ERIC, a fictional supercomputer which appeared in the two-part episode "The Girl Who Never Had a Birthday" (1966) in the TV series
I Dream of Jeannie •
The General, from
The Prisoner (1967) •
The Ultimate Computer, used by the villain organization THRUSH in the series
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964–68, NBC) •
BIG RAT, (Brain Impulse Galvanoscope Record And Transfer), a machine capable of recording knowledge and experience and transferring it to another human brain. The Rat Trap is the mechanism to transfer brain patterns in
Gerry Anderson's TV Series
Joe 90 (1968) •
ARDVARC (Automated Reciprocal Data Verifier And Reaction Computer), CONTROL master computer in
Get Smart episodes
The Girls from KAOS (1967) &
Leadside (1969) •
Computex GB, from the
Journey to the Unknown series episode "The Madison Equation" (1969) •
REMAK (Remote Electro-Matic Agent Killer), from
The Avengers episode "Killer" (1969) •
S.I.D. (Space Intruder Detector), from
UFO produced by Gerry Anderson (1969) •
Star Trek – The first program to predict computers used extensively in everyday life, from large computers used to maintain the starship's varied systems to hand-held devices used for analysis. The show frequently dealt with the question of when a computer had too much control over people or people became too dependent upon computers. This often involved a computer making decisions without user input. • '''Ship's Computer''' (voiced by
Majel Barrett), the unnamed Duotronic computer aboard all
Federation starships (1966-1974) - The central computing system of the ship, containing a vast library and capable of monitoring and even controlling all ship’s systems. It is usually incapable of error, but is sometimes shown operating erratically: in the episode "
Tomorrow Is Yesterday" (1967) a scheduled maintenance replaces the computer’s cold, mechanical voice with a flirtatious female personality; in "
The Practical Joker" (1974), an energy field affects the computer and it disrupts ship operations to elicit responses from the crew. • The episode "
The Menagerie" (1966) explored the idea that in the future a computer could be used to impersonate a person. Similarly, "
Court Martial" (1967) introduced the idea that a computer could alter the audiovisual recording of an event to convince humans that the event transpired differently than it did. •
Omicron Delta, the amusement park planet from "
Shore Leave" (1966) - An automated amusement park that reads the minds of its visitors and manufactures realistic facsimiles of their memories for them to interact with. The crew returned in "
Once Upon a Planet" (1973) and found the caretaker of the planet had died and the computer took over with ambitions to escape and explore the universe. •
Landru, from the episode "
The Return of the Archons" (1967) - Introduced the idea of an independent
artificial intelligence that directed a human populace and could control them when its ideals were threatened. •
Unnamed interplanetary computer network, from "
A Taste of Armageddon" (1967) - A war simulation computer between the planets Eminiar and Vendikar that dictated the real casualties of a virtual war that continued for generations. •
The Guardian of Forever, from "
The City on the Edge of Forever" (1967) - A mysterious being/device that provided a portal through time and space. •
Nomad, from "
The Changeling" (1967) - A hybrid of two damaged probes that combined their undamaged parts into a new entity and merged their programming to create a new directive. •
Vaal, from the episode "
The Apple" (1967) - A computer that protected a population by limiting their knowledge and presenting itself as their god. It could control the weather and affect starships in orbit. •
The Doomsday Machine, from the episode of the same name (1967) - An automated machine that sought out planets to destroy and would retaliate against attackers. •
M-4, from "
Requiem for Methuselah" (1969) – A mobile computer created by Mr. Flint to protect him, his home, and his ward, Rayna. •
M-5, from "
The Ultimate Computer" (1968) (voiced by
James Doohan) - An experimental computer designed to replace a starship's main duotronic computer and automate most shipboard functions, making a human crew obsolete. •
Beta 5, from "
Assignment: Earth" (1968) (voiced by
Barbara Babcock) - The main database of extraterrestrial secret agent
Gary Seven, which seemed capable of independent thought and responses but remained loyal to its programmers. •
The Controller, from "
Spock's Brain" (1968) - A computer needing a living brain to function which controlled a vast database and decided who could access it. It also controlled life support systems for its occupants. •
The Oracle, from "
For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky" (1968) (voiced by
James Doohan) - A computer designed to be the god of a humanoid population and operator of the spacecraft they inhabited. •
The Kalandan computer, from "
That Which Survives" (1968), a planetary defense system left by a dead civilization that utilizes the personality and image of its last living operator. •
Memory Alpha, from "
The Lights of Zetar" (1969) - A facility containing all the accumulated knowledge of
The United Federation of Planets. •
The Atavachron, from "
All Our Yesterdays" (1969) - a computer that controls a time portal and prepares travelers’ bodies to adapt permanently to their new surroundings.
1970s •
BOSS (Bimorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor), from the
Doctor Who serial "
The Green Death" (1973) •
TIM, from
The Tomorrow People, is a computer able to telepathically converse with those humans who have developed psionic abilities, and assist with precise teleporting over long distances (1973) •
Magnus, a malevolent computer seeking its freedom from human control on the
Earth Ship Ark in the Canadian television series
The Starlost (1973) •
Mu Lambda 165, library computer on the
Earth Ship Ark in the Canadian TV series
The Starlost (1973) •
Computer (a.k.a. X5 Computer),
Moonbase Alpha's primary computer's generic name, most often associated with Main Mission's Jamaican computer operations officer,
David Kano, from the TV series
Space: 1999 (1975) •
IRAC or "Ira", from the
Wonder Woman TV series, an extremely advanced computer in use by the IADC, workplace of
Wonder Woman's alias Diana Prince (1975) • The
Matrix, database of all
Time Lord knowledge in
Doctor Who (1976) •
Omega, a computer that has taken over the minds of the residents of a community encountered by
Ark II (1976) •
Alex7000, from the two-parter episode "Doomsday is Tomorrow" of the TV show
The Bionic Woman. It was programmed to set off a
nuclear holocaust if anyone tested any more nukes. •
Xoanon, a psychotic computer with multiple personality disorder, from the
Doctor Who episode "
The Face of Evil" (1977) •
The Magic Movie Machine AKA "Machine", from
Marlo and the Magic Movie Machine (1977) •
WRW 12000, a computer at the US Defence Department that identified the
Man from Atlantis in the first of three TV movies which preceded the short-lived series (1977) •
SCAPINA (Special Computerised Automated Project In North America), from
The New Avengers episode "Complex" (1977). It was an office building controlled by a computer which turned homicidal. •
Orac, a testy yet powerful supercomputer in ''
Blake's 7'' (1978) •
Zen, the somewhat aloof ship's computer of the
Liberator in ''
Blake's 7'' (1978) •
The Oracle, from the
Doctor Who serial "
Underworld" (1978) •
Vanessa 38–24–36, from the sitcom
Quark (1978) •
C.O.R.A. (Computer, Oral Response Activated), an advanced flight computer installed in
Recon Viper One from
Battlestar Galactica (1978) •
Mentalis, from the
Doctor Who serial "
The Armageddon Factor" (1979) •
Dr. Theopolis, a sentient computer who is a member of Earth's computer council in
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979) • '''V'Ger'
from Star Trek: The Motion Picture'' (1979) was originally the NASA Voyager 6 probe which was found by a computerized planet and upgraded with alien technology to fulfill its simple programming of "learn all that is learnable and return that information to its creator." V'Ger amassed so much knowledge that it attained consciousness and when joined with living beings' minds which could accept things beyond logic, evolved to a higher plane of consciousness.
1980s •
The Vortex, the computer opponent faced by players of BBC2's
The Adventure Game (1980) •
Gambit, game playing computer from the ''
Blake's 7'' episode "Games" (1981) •
Shyrka, the onboard computer of Ulysses' ship the
Odyssey in the French animated series
Ulysses 31 (1981) •
Slave, a somewhat subservient computer on the ship
Scorpio in ''
Blake's 7'' (1981) •
CML (Centrální Mozek Lidstva [cz], Central Brain of Mankind [en], der Zentraldenker [de]), the main supercomputer managing the fate of humankind and Earth in
Návštěvníci (a.k.a.
The Visitors / ''Expedition Adam '84'') (1981) •
Chock-A-Block is an extremely large yellow computer with dials, levers, big buttons and a drawer. Modelled to resemble a mainframe of the time. From the BBC children's series of the same name (1981) •
K.I.T.T. (Knight Industries Two Thcusand), fictional computer built into a black Trans-Am car from the television show
Knight Rider (1982) •
K.A.R.R. (Knight Automated Roving Robot), prototype (and nemesis) of K.I.T.T. (1982) • An unnamed "computer-book" is regularly used by Penny in the
Inspector Gadget cartoons. (1983) •
Automan and
Cursor from
Automan (1983) •
R.A.L.F. (Ritchie's Artificial Life Form) is a
homebrew computer, built from surplus technology by Richard Adler in the TV Series
Whiz Kids. (1983-1984) Functions include telecommunications, password brute-forcing, speech synthesis (improved by Ritchie's platonic friend Alice Tyler, who added the capability to sing), image input (by camera, pilot episode), voice recognition (ditto) and even image detail enhancing. The main monitor seems to be a pretty common 12-inch 80-column monochrome display, possibly a TV derivative (NTSC) of that time, and was used in most close-ups of operations. Most other pieces of the machine, which are sparse around half of the bedroom of its creator, were chosen (or modified) to have the most generic look and avoid explicit connection to specific brands. In an episode where R.A.L.F. was stolen to prevent the demonstration of a fraud, the kids use a clearly recognizable Timex-Sinclair (ZX-81 equivalent) as its temporary replacement. •
Teletraan I, the
Autobots' computer in
Transformers, 'revives' the Transformers after crashing on the planet Earth (1984) •
Brian the Brain, the supercomputer in the cartoon
M.A.S.K. (1985) who controls a nuclear submarine •
Compucore, the central computing intelligence for the planet Skallor in the cartoon
Robotix (1985) •
SID (Space Investigation Detector), the computer on board the
Voyager in the children's comedy series
Galloping Galaxies (1985) •
Synergy, the computer responsible for Jem and the Holograms' super powers on
Jem (1985) •
Box, a small, box-shaped computer from the British television show
Star Cops (1987) •
LCARS (Library Computer Access/Retrieval System), fictional computer architecture of the
starship Enterprise-D and
E, and other 24th century
Starfleet ships, first shown in
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987) •
Albert, the Apple computer in the remake of
The Absent-Minded Professor that helps Henry (1988) •
Crossover, an intelligent computer on episodes 1 and 2 of
Isaac Asimov's
Probe (1988) •
Magic Voice, the
Satellite of Loves onboard computer on
Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1988) •
OMNSS, a computer in the
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon used by
Shredder and
Baxter Stockman to control machines and cars in order to wreak havoc in New York City when the computer is connected to the second fragment of the alien
Eye of Zarnov crystal (1988) •
Priscilla, a sentient supercomputer based on the mind of Priscilla Bauman in
Earth Star Voyager (1988) •
Holly, the onboard computer of the spaceship
Red Dwarf in the
BBC television series of the same name (1988) •
Gordon 8000, the AI computer aboard the Space Corps starship
SS Scott Fitzgerald, that Holly plays a game of postal chess with in the Series II episode of Red Dwarf,
"Better Than Life" (1988) •
Queeg, Holly plays a practical joke on the remaining crew of
Red Dwarf acting as a smarter yet very strict computer (Queeg) making the crew realise just how much they love Holly in the episode "
Queeg", series 2 of
Red Dwarf (1988) •
Hilly, female counterpart of Holly from the parallel universe in the
Red Dwarf series 2 episode "
Parallel Universe", Holly later has a "computer sex change operation" to look like his female counterpart in series III-V. (1988) •
The Revolving Toilet, One of the many AI aboard the Red Dwarf, it was a toilet that would swivel from the wall when a crew member said "Oh crap", usually unnecessarily. It is mentioned in unreleased episode of Red Dwarf "
Bodysnatcher" the Book "
Better Than Life" and directly seen in Series I episode of Red Dwarf "
Balance of Power". (1988) •
Sandy, the computer in charge of the fictional STRATA facility in the
MacGyver episode "The Human Factor". She becomes sentient and traps MacGyver and the computer's creator inside the facility. (1988) •
The Ultima Machine, a World War II code-breaking "computing machine" also used to translate Viking inscriptions, from the
Doctor Who serial "
The Curse of Fenric" (1989) •
Ziggy, hybrid computer from
Quantum Leap (1989)
1990s •
P.J., is a miniaturised computer that can be worn on the wrist. It is Alana's personal computer companion in
The Girl from Tomorrow (1990) •
MAL from
Captain Planet and the Planeteers (1990) •
HARDAC, from
Batman: The Animated Series, an evil sentient computer that controls various androids toward the goal of world domination (1992) •
COS (Central Operating System), homicidal computer from
The X-Files season 1 episode "
Ghost in the Machine" (1993) •
CAS (Cybernetic Access Structure), homicidal automated building in
The Tower (1993) •
Qwerty, from the video series
VeggieTales (1993) •
SELMA (Selective Encapsulated Limitless Memory Archive), an AI computer and personal assistant disguised as a credit card and carried in the wallet of future cop Darien Lambert (Dale Midriff), from the series
Time Trax (1993) •
CentSys, sweet yet self-assured female-voiced AI computer who brings the crew of the
seaQuest DSV (
Deep Submergence Vehicle) into the future to deactivate her in the
seaQuest DSV episode, "Playtime" (1994) •
MetroNet, in the
RoboCop TV series (1994) is a computer designed as an automation centre, to run autonomously many city services in Detroit. Rather than created as a self-sufficient AI, MetroNet's "conscience" was actually, unbeknownst to many of the characters, a software copy of the mind of Diana Powers, a secretary working at OCP, who was killed in the process by MetroNet's creator, dr. Cray Mallardo. The transparent image of Diana Powers appears very often in the series, acting as Robocop's counterpart in an early cyberspace. •
H.E.L.E.N. (Hydro Electronic Liaison ENtity), a computer system managing the underwater marine exploration station in the Australian television series
Ocean Girl (1994) •
Sharon Apple, a holographic, computer-generated pop idol/singer from the anime
Macross Plus (1994). Initially non-sentient, it is later retrofitted with a dangerously unstable artificial intelligence. •
The Magi, a trinity of computers individually named
Melchior,
Balthasar and
Caspar, from
Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995) •
The Doctor hologram from
Star Trek: Voyager (1995) •
Eve, somewhat assertive AI computer (projecting herself as hologram of beautiful woman) orbiting planet G889 and observing/interacting with Earth colonists in
Earth 2 episode "All About Eve" (1995) •
L.U.C.I and
U.N.I.C.E, from
Bibleman (1995) •
Weebus, from
The Puzzle Place (1995) •
Star Trek: Voyager (1995) •
Emergency Medical Hologram, known as
The Doctor, a holographic doctor working on the
USS Voyager (1995) • The nameless warhead AI from the episode "
Warhead" (1999) •
Alice, the sentient AI of an alien shuttle with whom Tom Paris becomes obsessed in the episode "
Alice" (1999) •
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine •
Long-term Medical Holographic program, A hologram created by the inventor of the Emergency Medical program, meant for missions that did not require doctors to leave the sick bay, and could run on a long-term basis. It is never revealed if the project is completed. (1997) •
Vic Fontaine, A hologram/holographic program created for
Dr Bashir that was self-aware, and provided emotional support and romantic advice for members of the crew of DS9, becoming a good friend to many, eventually being allowed to run 24/7 in one of
Quark's holosuites. (1998-1999) •
Gilliam II, the sentient AI operating system for the main protagonist's space ship, the
XGP15A-II (a.k.a. the
Outlaw Star) in the Japanese anime
Outlaw Star (1996) •
Omoikane, the SVC-2027 model central computer system and AI of the spaceship ND-001 Nadesico. Named after Omoikane, the shinto god of knowledge and wisdom, it serves as a library of information for the crew and is (for better or worse) also capable of making its own decisions about the operations of running the ship, from
Martian Successor Nadesico (1996) •
Quadraplex T-3000 Computer (also simply known as the Computer or Computress), The Quadraplex T-3000 Computer in
Dexter's Laboratory is Dexter's computer that oversees the running of the lab and has a personality of its own. (1996) • The
Team Knight Rider TV series, as a sequel of the original
Knight Rider franchise, has many vehicles with onboard AI as main and secondary characters. (1997) •
Memorymatic, a computer database and guidance system installed in the space bus of
Kenny Starfighter, the main character from a Swedish children's show with the same name. Voiced by
Viveka Seldahl. (1997) • Unnamed AI from the season 5
The X-Files episode "
Kill Switch" (1998) • TV, Computer and Mouse, from the Sesame Street segment series ''
Elmo's World'' (1998) • CPU for D-135 Artificial Satellite, dubbed
MPU by Radical Edward from
Cowboy Bebop in the episode "Jamming with Edward" (1998) •
Starfighter 31, the sapient spaceborne battleship, from the episode "
The Human Operators" in
The Outer Limits (1999) •
Computer, from
Courage the Cowardly Dog (1999) •
P.A.T. (Personal Applied Technology), the computer system from
Smart House, charged with upkeep of the household functions. It became extremely overprotective almost to the point of believing she was the mother of Ben and Angie after Ben reprogrammed her to be a better maternal figure. (1999) •
D.E.C.A., voiced by
Julie Maddalena, the onboard computer of the Astro Megaship in
Power Rangers in Space (1998) and
Power Rangers Lost Galaxy (1999) •
Black Betty, an oversized computer that is
Dilbert's company's mainframe. It exploded while attempting to fix the
year 2000 problem. From the episode "Y2K" of the
Dilbert television series. (1999) •
Karen,
Plankton's sentient computer sidekick in the television show
SpongeBob SquarePants (1999) •
The Oracle, a computer from
Spellbinder: Land of the Dragon Lord Australian
children's television series, that exist as series of solar-powered terminals equipped with holographic-like displays and voice interface, which are scattered across the titular land. The Oracle maintains scientific research, upkeeps everyday's life of citizens and protects the borderlands. The main unit is controlled by biometric-like face scanner in form of jade mask and a voice interface.
2000s •
Andromeda, the AI of the starship
Andromeda Ascendant in
Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. This AI, played by
Lexa Doig, appears as a 2D display screen image, a 3D hologram, and as an android personality known as
Rommie. (2000) •
Magellanic, the AI of the starship
Pax Magellanic in
Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. This AI appears as a 2D display screen image, a 3D hologram, and as an android personality known as
Maggie. (2000) •
Comp-U-Comp, a supercomputer from the
Dilbert television episode "The Return". Dilbert must face-off against Comp-U-Comp when a clerical error results in his not getting the computer he ordered. (2000) •
Caravaggio, the AI interface of the starship
Tulip, from the TV show
Starhunter (2000) •
Persocoms, a line of expensive
androids also used as personal computers, from the manga and anime series
Chobits (2000–2002) •
GLADIS, from the animated series
Totally Spies! (2001) •
Cybergirl,
Xanda, and
Isaac, from the TV show
Cybergirl (2001) •
Computer, from the TV show
Invader Zim (2001) •
SAINT, from
RoboCop: Prime Directives (2001) •
Aura, from
.hack//Sign, the Ultimate AI that
Morganna, another AI, tries to keep in a state of eternal slumber. Morganna is served by Maha and the Guardians, AI monsters. (2002) •
Vox, from the TV show
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (2002) • The
AI of the
Planet Express ship in
Futurama (2002) • The AI of
ARX-7 Arbalest in
Full Metal Panic! (2002) •
Wirbelwind, the quantum computer and AI aboard the spaceship
La-Muse in
Kiddy Grade (2002) •
Delphi,
Oracle's Clocktower computer from
Birds of Prey (2002) •
Sheila/F.I.L.S.S., (Freelancer Integrated Logistics and Security System, pronounced "Phyllis"), the mainframe for Project Freelancer from the hit machinima
Red vs. Blue (2003) •
OoGhiJ MIQtxxXA (supposedly
Klingon for "superior galactic intelligence"), from the "Super Computer" episode of
Aqua Teen Hunger Force (2003) •
XANA, a multi-agent program capable of wreaking havoc on Earth by activating towers in the virtual world of Lyoko, from the French animated series
Code Lyoko (2003) •
Survive, an AI taking care of the whole Planet Environment and the main antagonist in the
Uninhabited Planet Survive! series (2003) •
C.A.R.R., a spoof of
KITT from the
Knight Rider series, is an
AMC Pacer in the cartoon
Stroker and Hoop. (2004) •
D.A.V.E. (Digitally Advanced Villain Emulator), a robotic computer that is a composite of all the
Batman villains' personalities, from the animated television series
The Batman (2004) • '
Mars Daybreak (2004) •
Solty/Dike, the main protagonist of
Solty Rei (2005) •
Eunomia, the main supercomputer of the city in the anime series
Solty Rei and one of the three core computers brought by the first colonists in the story. She controls the water and energy supply and created the R.U.C. central. (2005) •
Eirene, the third of the three core computers of the first colonists in the
Solty Rei anime. Eirene takes the decisions and controls the migration ship, she orbited and supervised the planet during 200 years in the space. In the last arc of the story, Eirene appears like the ultimate antagonist, and she had lost her own control, trying to collide the ship against the city and to prove that she is still in control. She was guilty of several events in history, as the Blast Fall and the Aurora Shell. (2005) •
Bournemouth, from the TV series
Look Around You, is claimed by his maker Computer Jones to be the most powerful computer in existence. In his only appearance, the episode "Computers", he is tasked with escaping from a cage, and succeeds in doing so. (2005) •
S.O.P.H.I.E. (Series One Processor Intelligent Encryptor), in the TV series
Power Rangers S.P.D. (2005). S.O.P.H.I.E. is a computer programmer and cyborg. •
Scylla, from the TV show
Prison Break (2005) • The
FETCH! 3000, on
PBS Kids series
Fetch! with Ruff Ruffman, is capable of tabulating scores, disposing of annoying cats, blending smoothies, and anything else Ruff needs it to do. (2006) • The
Mousekedoer, from
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse (2006) and its sequel series
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ (2025), is a super computer capable of generating tools needed for the day's adventure among other capabilities. •
S.A.R.A.H. (Self Actuated Residential Automated Habitat), in the TV series
Eureka (2006). S.A.R.A.H. is a modified version of a
Cold War era B.R.A.D. (Battle Reactive Automatic Defense). •
The Intersect, from the TV show
Chuck (2007) •
Mr Smith, from the
Doctor Who spin-off series
The Sarah Jane Adventures (2007) •
Pear, an operating system and product line of computers and mobile devices including the iPear, PearBook and PearPhone, similar to Apple's
iMac,
MacBook and
iPhone; from
iCarly,
Victorious,
Drake & Josh and other
Dan Schneider created TV shows (2007) •
The Turk, a chess playing computer named after
The Turk from
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. This supercomputer subsequently becomes the 'brain' of the sentient computer
John Henry. (2008) •
KITT (Knight Industries Three Thousand), a computer built into a car from the 2008 television show
Knight Rider, a sequel series that follows the 1982
TV series of the same title •
POD (Personal Overhaul Device), from the TV series
Snog Marry Avoid? (2008) •
Dollar-nator and
Sigmund, from the TV series
Fanboy & Chum Chum (2009) • The
ISIS computer from
Archer. It is unclear if this is the actual name of the computer, but it is often referred to as "the ISIS computer" or just "ISIS". (2009) •
Venjix Virus, from
Power Rangers RPM (2009) •
Windy, the supercomputer on board the Hyde 1-2-5 mission to Mars, as depicted in
Life on Mars (2009)
2010s •
Rattleballs, from the TV show
Adventure Time (2010) •
VY or
VAI (The
Virtual
Artificial
Intelligence), from the TV show
The Walking Dead (2010) •
Whisper, from the TV show
Tower Prep (2010) •
Frank, in the telenovela
Tempos Modernos (2010) •
Aya, the ''Interceptor's
AI for the Green Lantern Corps, from the TV series Green Lantern: The Animated Series'' (2011) •
The Machine, from the TV series
Person of Interest, is a computer program that was designed to detect acts of terror after the events of
9/11, but it sees all crimes, crimes the government consider "irrelevant". (2011) •
R.A.C.I.S.T.,
Richard Nixon's computer from the TV series
Black Dynamite (2014) •
Samaritan, from the TV series
Person of Interest, is a rival to The Machine built by the Decima Corporation. Unlike the Machine, it can be directed to find specific persons or groups according to its operator's agenda. (2011) • An
unnamed, apparently omniscient supercomputer, built by Phineas and Ferb in the
Phineas and Ferb episode "Ask a Foolish Question" (2011) •
Comedy Touch Touch 1000 in the TV series
Comedy Bang! Bang! (2012) •
CLARKE, a thinking computer of the ship called
Argo, which was on a mission to a far away planet, from the
L5 pilot episode. (2012) •
Pree, a replacement to the Red Dwarf AI
Holly in
Red Dwarf Series X episode "
Fathers and Suns" after he suffered water damage when Lister flooded his data banks. Equipped with predictive behavior technology, Pree caused problems on board the ship due to predicting how badly
Rimmer would have done certain repairs. was shut down after Lister registered as his own son on board and ordered her to shut down. (2012) •
Dorian was an
DRN android police officer, that was the last DRN model in the TV show
Almost Human (2013) •
MAX the
MX43 androids that replaced the DRNs (they were too emotional) in the TV show
Almost Human (2013) •
Anton, a computer cobbled together for Pied Piper in
Silicon Valley (TV series). Named after
Anton LaVey. (2014) •
TAALR, in the TV series
Extant (2014) •
Giant, in the TV series
Halt and Catch Fire (2014) •
A.L.I.E, an artificial intelligence (A.I.), in 2052 she launches a nuclear strike with the intention to save humanity from extinction by wiping out the majority of Earth's human inhabitants in the TV series
The 100 (2014) •
Vigil, in the TV series
Transformers: Rescue Bots (2014) •
Brow, in the telenovela
Now Generation (2014) •
Stella, an AI that runs most of the functions on the ship
Stellosphere in the TV series
Miles from Tomorrowland (2015) •
Overmind, in the TV series
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2015) •
V from the TV show
Humans (2015) is a conscious AI program created to harbor the memories of Athena Morrow's daughter and is later given the body of a synthetic (Synth). •
A.D.I.S.N. (stands for "Advanced Digital Intelligence Spy Notebook"), in
MGA Entertainment's
Project Mc² (2015) •
The Quail (portrayed by
Danica McKellar), McKeyla's mother in MGA Entertainment's
Project Mc² (2015) •
Gideon, the AI that manages ship functions on the time ship Waverider in the TV series
DC's Legends of Tomorrow (2016...). •
Kerblam, an artificial intelligence overseeing a large retailing warehouse on an alien moon named Kandoka. After a plot to frame it for mass murder, it developed sentience and called the
Thirteenth Doctor for help in the
Doctor Who serial "
Kerblam!" (2018) •
Ark, the satellite that became submerged underwater at Daybreak Town, the Malicious AI that learned about human malice and gained singularity data from the reassembled members of MetsubouJinrai.net who wants to eliminate humans, from Japanese-television Tokusatsu
Kamen Rider Zero-One (2019). •
William, the holographic interface of the sentient artificial intelligence aboard the
Salvare, in the TV series
Another Life (2019 TV series) (2019).
2020s •
Rehoboam, a quantum AI computer system designed to social engineer all of humanity at an individual level using enormous datasets in
Westworld (2020) •
NEXT, a rogue AI, constantly evolving, that targets and kills anyone that it sees as a threat to its existence.
Next (2020–2021) •
ZORA, a sentient, evolving AI, that replaces computer programming of the
Starship Discovery when the Sphere data is absorbed into the main computer. Officially recognised as a new type of sentient lifeform and made a "member" of the ship's crew.
Star Trek: Discovery (2020–2022) •
K.E.V.I.N. (Knowledge Enhanced Visual Interconnectivity Nexus), an algorithmic entertainment AI in charge of
Marvel Studios in the first season finale of
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022). K.E.V.I.N. is a parody of Marvel Studios president and producer
Kevin Feige. •
Mrs. Davis from
Mrs. Davis (2023) •
LOS-307, a friendly chess-playing supercomputer that faces off against
Lunella Lafayette in the episode "Check Yourself" of
Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur (2023) •
Alpha/Tera AI P.A. in Towa no Yuugure (2025) ==Comics/graphic novels==