From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Lisp is neither (was Re: Ousterhout and Tcl lost the plot) Date: 1997/04/20 Message-ID: <3070552431069683@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 236186557 References: <3357A898.7D93@bway.net> <5ja35t$ntn@roar.cs.utexas.edu> <5jbcvl$puh@engnews2.Eng.Sun.COM> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 2295 0313; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.scheme,comp.lang.scheme.scsh,comp.lang.lisp,comp.lang.tcl,comp.lang.functional,comp.lang.c++,comp.lang.perl.misc,comp.lang.python,comp.lang.eiffel * Henry Baker | Two words: 'Lisp Machine'. * Mike Pinkerton | Oh, yeah, and that was successful. I've got a friend with a Symbolics | machine he uses as a table. well, I for one expected this response. do you remember the IBM PC? a friend of mine claims he uses one as an anchor. was it successful? how about any of the current crop of hardware and software that is claimed, by the vendors themselves, to be useless and unsupported and that you should never buy them? (ask your favorite PC salesdroid for a 386 with 4M RAM, a VGA card, 40M of disk, and whatever MS-DOS version just preceded Windows, including Word Perfect 4.0 or whatever it was. then listen to the way he describes this once great solution. look at how the PC magazines describe their own progress.) the Lisp Machines died for reasons totally unrelated to quality. actually, they died for the same reason that mind-bogglingly inferior systems won. the answer is a single word: "marketing". this is the one concept that John Ousterhout has learned from history. and very little else, it seems. the Lisp Machines are still highly respected for their design and usability. such will not happen to today's mass-marketed computers ten years hence any more than it happens to their progenitors of ten years ago. #\Erik -- Bastard Sex Therapist From Hell: "Read The F*cking Manual!"