Hi all,
Nick is pointing to a big elephant in the room.
On Thu, 12 Oct 2017, Nick Levine wrote:
The website at lisp.org contained a photo of John McCarthy (and nothing else) since the week he died six years ago. What's the message?
In contrast take a quick look at (say) python.org, a site devoted to really assisting people to use that language.
Do we care, and if we do how do we go about effecting change?
For years, there was talk of developing lisp.org to become a friendly portal for all Lisp dialects. The basic idea was to structure the site in a useful way for a few key groups, roughly young beginners, seasoned developers, and managers.
Students and young developers would get directed towards educational programs and their associated ecosystems. More advanced developers would get guidance on how to choose the right dialect and implementation for their focus, pointers to educational resources, pointers to support groups, a jobs forum, etc. Managers would get business success stories, explanations of the value proposition of Lisp, professional contacts, etc. A generic section would also cover topics like "what features are common in Lisp languages?" (NOT "what is a Lisp?"), present common history like the Lisp family tree, have directories of websites, books, and journals, etc.
There were multiple false starts at accomplishing this. Tim Daly had a friend build one prototype. He presented many good ideas but there were some strong points of contention. After this, I tried addressing those issues, circulating a site outline, and there was talk of how we might contributors from the various dialects. etc.
Two key challenges: (1) Assemble a community around lisp.org (not common-lisp.net or schemers.org or racket-lang.org or clojure.org or ...). (2) Find someone with the experience and energy to make this happen.
Funding was not the issue. Server technology was a distracting issue.
- Daniel