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Software projects developed at universities

This is a list of software developed at universities including software, programming languages, operating systems, web browsers, computer graphics tools, database systems, scientific computing software, or machine learning frameworks that originated or are maintained by university research, students, or academic laboratories.

Artificial intelligence and machine learning

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Educational and visual programming environments

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Programming languages

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Compilers, debuggers, and software development tools

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Text editors

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  • ECCE – text editor designed at the (Edinburgh)
  • Emacs – extensible text editor family originating at the MIT AI Lab (MIT)
  • ex – line editor that evolved into vi (UC Berkeley)
  • Lapis – experimental text editor and web browser developed at MIT
  • nvi – free implementation of vi for BSD systems (UC Berkeley)
  • Pico – text editor from the Pine email software project (Washington)
  • TECO – text editor and programming environment associated with MIT time-sharing systems (MIT)
  • vi – screen-oriented text editor created for BSD Unix (UC Berkeley)

Databases, data management, and distributed storage

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Computer graphics, visualization, and image editing

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Early personal-computing software

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Games

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Education, publishing, and research infrastructure

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Formal methods and theorem proving

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Geographic information systems and mapping

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Internet, web, and communication software

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Operating systems, kernels, and networking systems

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Robotics, simulation, and modeling

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Scientific and numerical computing

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Zheng, Lianmin; Yin, Liangsheng; Xie, Zhiqiang; Sun, Chuyue; Huang, Jeff; Yu, Cody Hao; Cao, Shiyi; Kozyrakis, Christos; Stoica, Ion; Gonzalez, Joseph E.; Barrett, Clark; Sheng, Ying (December 12, 2023). "SGLang: Efficient Execution of Structured Language Model Programs". arXiv:2312.07104 [cs.AI].
  2. ^ "vLLM". Sky Computing Lab. University of California, Berkeley. April 25, 2024. Retrieved April 25, 2026.
  3. ^ "Team". Racket. Retrieved April 25, 2026.
  4. ^ "About". PostgreSQL. PostgreSQL Global Development Group. Retrieved April 25, 2026.
  5. ^ "About". The Generic Mapping Tools. The GMT Developers. Retrieved April 25, 2026.
  6. ^ "On the Origins of Google". National Science Foundation. August 17, 2004. Retrieved April 25, 2026.
  7. ^ Baxter, Julius (2011). Open Source Hardware Development and the OpenRISC Project: A Review of the OpenRISC Architecture and Implementations (PDF) (Master's thesis thesis). KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Retrieved April 25, 2026.