MIT researchers built the TX-0, the first general-purpose, programmable computer built with transistors. For easy replacement, designers
placed each transistor circuit inside a "bottle," similar to a vacuum tube. Constructed at MIT´s Lincoln Laboratory, the TX-0 moved to the
MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics, where it hosted some early imaginative tests of programming, including a Western movie shown on TV,
3-D tic-tac-toe, and a maze in which mouse found martinis and became increasingly inebriated.