I mean to replace the ones that we use today. Not the ones we used 30 years ago. General purpose operating systems. Perhaps with a distribution we can download for free and install on commodity computing hardware, and actually use today for our primary areas of work/interest.
Note the section 1.7 in your own link ("End of the Lisp machines"). The Lisp software ecosystem was never as rich, broad and varied as the C/C++ software ecosystem is today, before it died.
BTW, I only stumbled across your comment by accident, since you replied to the parent poster instead of me. Parenthesis mismatch?
Note the section 1.7 in your own link ("End of the Lisp machines"). The Lisp software ecosystem was never as rich, broad and varied as the C/C++ software ecosystem is today, before it died.
BTW, I only stumbled across your comment by accident, since you replied to the parent poster instead of me. Parenthesis mismatch?