• @selfMA
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    51 year ago

    he did! it died almost instantly because it’s a mediocre language built by someone with no idea why Lisp is good and it requires you to install a much better Lisp to use it because it’s not even self-hosting. I was hoping arc’s failure would be when the shine came off of his image as a Lisp hacker, but the tech industry isn’t that smart

    here’s one I’ve been wanting to ask for a while: did anything of value come out of paully owning a Lisp machine?

    • Steve
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      41 year ago

      Arc is designed for exploratory programming: the kind where you decide what to write by writing it.

      Haha, fucking wot?

      • @selfMA
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        41 year ago

        aka don’t ask for docs because you’re supposed to learn the language by making the REPL crash. paully really doesn’t know anything about good Lisp

        also I just remembered his second attempt at reinventing Lisp, which was much lazier. no website for that one, just a couple of text files, cause he did the bare minimum of what arc couldn’t (a metacircular compiler, theoretically, but nobody can run it) and then just decided that was good and dropped the project

        paul! I’ve seen someone compile Lisp into pure lambda calculus! it was fucking insane! nobody is impressed with this basic shit!

        • Steve
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          31 year ago

          I mentioned his The Acceleration of Addictiveness essay in a recent blog post because Nir Eyal seems to have justified his whole “habit-forming” brand on it.