One thing I really dislike, is the amount people think hosting data is hard.
People talk about needing dozens of cores or gigs of ram to host a database or a website. They get impressed by projects where someone runs a website from an Apple ][ or a pi0.
We, as free software advocates, need to remind people that the charger for a Macbook Pro is enough to run a website, not the Macbook Pro
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Reasons somebody may have misspelled a word: glitchy phone screen, non-native english speaker, they expected their spellchecker to fix it and it failed, dyslexia, standardised spelling is a fake invention of the printing press industry to sell more moveable type
Reasons somebody my have substituted a homophone (eg their and there): Their dictation software fucked up, their spell checker fucked up, they're a non-native english speaker, they were thinking verbally, standardised spelling is a fake invention of the printing press industry to sell more moveable type.
Reasons somebody may have put in the wrong word: Their spellchecker did a substitution and they didn’t notice, their dictation software fucked up, they speak a different English dialect in which that word was correct, they were editing the sentence and made a mistake.
Syntax errors very rarely indicate unclear thinking. They're just typos. It's the logic errors that fuck everything up. Anybody judging the value of an argument based on syntax is missing the more important picture: the printing press companies have lead us down an evil path, but its not to layt too eskayp
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Happens to me all the time, especially when I'm composing a post on a dinky phone screen with on-screen keys that are tiny pixels I must mash with my meaty sausage fingers.
I tend to compose non-linearly, maybe writing the conclusion last, then write the main points above it, and only then do the intro. That's often more than the max 500 chars, so then I go back to shorten sentences, change verb tenses, remove adjectives. If I'm not careful, that can result in weird syntax & spelling
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Dear state and local governments: STOP using Google Drive as your only means to disseminate public information.
Private systems are not public, they are subject to arbitrary access controls with no public oversight or appeals process, and therefore they do NOT meet your responsibility to provide information via public means.
This means you, #Brattleboro and #Vermont. #VTpol
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Anxiety's been bad again lately. I am moderately worried about losing the apartment. Taking steps to try to keep that from happening, but sometimes just trying to engage with the problem brings on a panic attack.
I have medication to help with that now, but it makes it hard to think clearly. I will survive this one way or another, but my life is going to have to change. I don't handle change well.
This probably won't help me in my current job search, but is it worth learning COBOL? I've heard that there are still a bunch of critical systems out there that use it, and that it's hard to find COBOL devs these days.
Is this still the case? The only downside I can see is that I'd have to program in COBOL.
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Having worked adjacent to 4 different mainframes at this point in my career along with their "modernization" efforts. Reading COBOL, not terrible. Writing it, eh, probably not so bad but I've never done, only had to read and comprehend what it does. And there are non-MFs that provide implementation of COBOL so you can learn on your own time.
The devil is going to be understanding IBM systems "junk": CICS, DASD, DCLGEN, TSO, RACF etc
@billinkc
What he said. Mainframe basics are more important than COBOL, I'd say.
I work for a company that's doing "Mainframe Modernization" and as a result we have to understand the old crappy non-modern stuff in order to implement new stuff! (Currently my group isn't reimplementing anything based in Cobol. We do Db2 monitoring stuff.)
rocketsoftware.com
rocket.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/r…
(We have AI hype on the front page but really we're just programming. I guess some departments might be doing AI, but I think we're just scared we'll miss the bandwagon. So don't ignore us just for that.)
Rocket Software
Rocket Software provides IT modernization and IT automation solutions that help businesses solve their most complex IT challenges, across infrastructure, data, and applications.Rocket Software
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Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
@nosrednayduj OMG super small world. One of the projects I was on dealt with model 204/m204. We ended up building a real time synchronization between m204 and SQL Server via messaging.
It was going to be a very cool way to modernize the client's data storage while they incrementally switched the front ends.
Pity literal debt caught up to them 💥
Dear job posting,
If you expect me to install spyware so that you can micromanage me while I work, at least have the decency not to expect me to supply the hardware.
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Went to pick up a prescription and the guy ahead of me in line was chewing the pharmacist out about the automated system, which admittedly sucks but is certainly a decision made by corporate, not her.
He repeatedly threatened to take his business elsewhere. Were I in her position, the response I'd have wanted to give was "please do".
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Sooo... I have a flatpak version of LibreOffice, and for whatever reason (probably sandboxing) the spellchecker can't see the text of my document.
I may or may not have sent off a bunch of resumes that said that I "wrote technical documentaiton" in a previous job.
That's just super.
There's a job I really want a decent shot at. Thank God I caught it before submitting to that one.
Edit: I typo'd my typo. 🙃
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Back in the 1990s I worked at a very large government facility on an RFP for getting an ISP. The winning bidder had in the footer of every page "Bid for Interenet Service Provider." Nobody but me noticed.
Of course, the Interenet was so new in the 1990s that maybe they thought that's how it's spelled...
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I had a bit of a hard time getting into this one, but once it got going it was worth it. That said, I think I'm going to step back from the horror genre for a bit. I'll probably return to it when life settles a bit.
(comment on HEX)
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I am in urgent job search mode, so I'm gonna throw this out here and see if anything comes of it.
I am a #Canadian, fluent in both #English and #French. I have experience with several programming languages. My strongest proficiency is with #Haskell and #C. I also have a reasonable grasp of #HTML, #JavaScript, #SQL, #Python, #Lua, #Linux system administration, #bash scripting, #Perl, #AWK, some #Lisp (common, scheme, and emacs), and probably several others I've forgotten to mention.
I am not necessarily looking for something in tech. I just need something stable. I have done everything from software development, to customer support, to factory work, though my current circumstances make in-person work more difficult than remote work. I have been regarded as a hard worker in every job I have ever held.
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Accueil | OVHcloud carrières
OVHcloud Recrute ! Retrouvez l'ensemble des offres d'emploi du groupe dans le monde et postulez directement en ligne.careers.ovhcloud.com
I've been an #Emacs user for like 20 years because there was one thing I needed to do back then that was made easier by elisp, and I just got used to using it. In all that time, I hardly ever tinkered much with the config, save a few minor tweaks it was pretty much stock. I had no strong feelings about Emacs in general, it was just the text editor I'd grown comfortable with.
I've recently been diving into #Lisp and poking around with my Emacs config, and after all these years, I think I'm starting to get the appeal. I am still a proponent of "use the tool that works for you", but I'm personally firmly on team Emacs now.
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Everyone who confuses correlation and causation ends up dying...
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Welp, it's #FountainPen cleaning and re-inking day. #Today I re-learned why I don't use shimmer inks in my #TWSBI Diamond 580. In fact, I usually reserve them exclusively for dip pens.
Time to meticulously clean out a clogged feed. It didn't even make it a paragraph.
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I've got a love/hate with shimmers and TWSBIs.
What ink were you using?
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
So, I've been taking another run at learning #CommonLisp. The last time I tried, I simply could not wrap my brain around macros. I'm reading the same book again, but this time am a more experienced programmer, and it all just clicked in my head.
I might actually end up enjoying #Lisp after all. I don't know if it'll dethrone #Haskell, but I'm starting to get why people like it.
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I finally got around to setting up a gopher hole. There's nothing there yet, but hopefully soon there will be.
gopher://sdf.org/1/users/jlamothe
(Apologies to anyone with a screen reader. There will be an accessible version.)
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
I recently got a #Sailor #Hokoro dip pen, and much to my chagrin have found that several of my #FountainPen inks do not work well in it. It's almost like the ink refuses to be picked up by the nib/feed.
Has anyone else encountered this? Is there a solution?
Edit: the paper also seems to be a factor
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Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
As to the ink- some of my fountain pen inks absolutely refuse to work with my various dip pen nibs, while other ftn pen inks of mine work fine and coat/cling nicely.
Adding about 1/5 volume of Gum Arabic does work to adapt a small vial of ftn pen ink for dip pens, but then don't use that ink for your ftn pens. The gum-treated inks tend to dry a bit shiny and make shimmer inks less shimmery... something to keep in mind. There are dip pen-specific inks for sale, of course.
For black waterproof ink that works really well right out of the bottle in both ftn pens and dip pens, I like my De Atramentis 'Archive' black ink. It's luxurious! That ink can also be used for drawing and then watercoloring over when dry, btw.
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It will soon be Autism awareness month, that wonderful time of the year when many autistics hit their foxholes screaming "incoming", or take to their bunkers and hide.
"But why?" I hear you ask. "Surely awareness is a good thing?"
Well, obviously yes, normally, but mostly, actually, no. Not in the way this normally pans out, anyway. Because this is the time of year when everything starts getting lit up blue and puzzle pieces start making their appearance and Autism Speaks articles rear their ugly, eugenic, heads. No matter how many times the vast bulk of the autism community explain that these symbols and the organisation that they are linked to, do not bloody speak for us and never sodding will.
Pity-me mothers parade their kids to showcase how terrible their lives are, or how there isn't enough help for their darling children. Which, whilst admittedly this is true for the kids, could be highlighted in better ways. Various celebrities and sports stars come out about the wonders of being diagnosed with autism and the huge change it has made in their pampered lives and puff pieces pop up everywhere about how someone succeeded because of their autistic superpower, or how they wouldn't be where they were now without it, or how someone's a hero, for standing up for their autistic friend. And editors across the land, slap themselves on their backs for such a wonderful job of awareness and here's to the next year and then silence once again falls.
OK, I may be slightly exaggerating this, but unfortunately not by as much as you might be thinking. So many times, even within the good articles and representation, there is the implicit message that only an official diagnosis can do this for you, which is a real kick in the teeth for everyone who has as much chance of getting one of those, as of winning the lottery. That this is something that is seen in us, rather than something that we can see ourselves. And all too often, even with the good stuff, it's always accompanied by the stock, what is autism? answers, from the internet. You know, the ones that just dryly quote the highlights of our disorder, in a way that none of us can actually recognise ourselves in and certainly don't help with others seeing us.
And this is the real problem with awareness month. It's all fine and dandy trying to increase awareness. But of what? Is it the problems and struggles, the difficulty of having autistic children, or being autistic in a world without support? The virtues of finally having your eyes opened to your autistic superpower? Of how the community and others could finally rally around you.
Or is it the different stories that finally allow others to see us, or even for us to finally see ourselves after decades in the dark. That allow the friend or neighbour, or workmate to maybe stop seeing you as the weird, or creepy, or even scary, person. But instead, someone who's just different, who sees and perhaps understands the world in a way that they don't. Not superpowered, or a burden, or broken in any way. Just yourself, just autistic. The stories that lead to acceptance and not just awareness.
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I'm glad they were able to get the help they needed and it just goes to show how different we all are.
This whole topic made me make a list with 31 question... I wanted to make a nice paper for them, but got distracted...
Anyhow here's the list. I'd be very happy if someone helped me to fix wording or such ...
Here's my ideas:
----------------------------
1. What is your current hobby(special interst)?
2. Tell us a thing you like about your autism? What do you like about yourself?
3. What is you favourite stim?
4. How would you explain autism to someone who never heard about this?
5. Let's invent new autism logo's, because we don't want to be puzzle pieces. Share your ideas and drawings!
6. What was an occasion where you felt able to unmask and be yourself around others?
7. What is a funny or curious fact you learned from pursing your hobbies (special Interests)?
8. Have you ever been praised for being honest?
9. What would your perfect day look like? Dreaming allowed, doesn't have to be realistic!
10. What's the thing you struggle with most being autistic in everyday life? Are there workarounds that help you? e.h. headphones against noise?
11. I want to make a link-list, so ... What websites do you recommend to learn about autism?
12. Are you late-diagnosed?
13. What is a skill you can do very well? Do you think, it is because you are autistic?
14. Let's make a image! What makes you happy? Drawing stick figures is perfectly fine!
15. Share a piece of advice about how people tic and why. What did life teach you?
16. As a child, what were your hobbies? What toys did you like to play with?
17. Sometimes one feels like one does not belong in with world... Would you like to meet aliens? What would you do, if you did? Alternatively, would you like to travel in space?
18. What tools and tricks help you get along in everyday life? Share your experience?
19. Do you have a favourite plush toy? Let's share cute images!
20. Who has treated you unfairly because of your autism? Let's write them an angry letter, (you don't have to send it...)
21. Who has been surprisingly accommodating to you and why? How did you feel about that?
22. What would your perfect vacation look like? Would you like to travel and see other places or stay at home?
23. What's the best thing about the actuallyautistic hashtag?
24. What kind of research would you like to see about autism? What things are you most curious about and/or what research would be most beneficial for you?
25. What helps you to regain energy?
26. Silly task: Are there foods you like or dislike to eat? Let's draw them with funny faces!
27. What do you do, when energy runs low? What strategies help you through the day?
28. Have you ever been abroad? How does being in a different culture compare to being autistic for you?
29. Do you have a favourite stim toy? Share an image and tell us how you obtained it!
30. What makes you happy about being autistic?
31. What would you like to share with your fellow neurodiverse fellows here on the fediverse? Feel free to post!
It usually goes without saying, but please be kind to each other in the comments, this should be a positive experience. Thanks.
Also, of course, only post and share what you are comfortable sharing with others online. Have fun! 😀
---------------------
Think that would be fun?
🙃 😀
@marionline I love your idea! Let’s make this month OUR month and not their. Will answer to the questions later!
@adelinej 😆 Yes! Exactly that!
I think this should have a hashtag. We could use #AutismApril or something in combination with other hashtags like: #actuallyautistic or
#autismacceptancemonth to make the questions&answer toots searchable?
Looking forward to read your answer, and of course I'll write an answer to the questions as well. 😀
1. What is your current hobby (special interest)?
2. Tell us a thing you like about your autism? What do you like about yourself?
3. What is your favourite stim?
4. How would you explain autism to someone who never heard about it?
5. Let's invent new autism logos, because we don't want to be puzzle pieces. Share your ideas and drawings!
6. What was an occasion where you felt able to unmask and be yourself around others?
7. What is a funny or curious fact you learned from pursing your hobbies (special interests)?
8. Have you ever been praised for being honest?
9. What would your perfect day look like? Dreaming is allowed; it doesn't have to be realistic!
10. What's the thing your autism causes the most problems for you in everyday life? Are there workarounds that help you? e.g. headphones against noise?
11. I want to make a link-list, so: What websites do you recommend to learn about autism?
12. Are you late-diagnosed?
13. What is a skill you can do very well? Do you think, it is because you are autistic?
14. Let's make a image! What makes you happy? Drawing stick figures is perfectly fine!
15. Share a piece of advice about how people tic and why. What did you learn by coping with tics?
16. As a child, what were your hobbies? What toys did you like to play with?
17. Sometimes one feels like one does not belong in with world. Would you like to meet aliens? What would you do, if you did? Alternatively, would you like to travel in space?
18. What tools and tricks help you get along in everyday life? Please share your experience.
19. Do you have a favourite plush toy? Let's share cute images!
20. Who has treated you unfairly because of your autism? Let's write them an angry letter, (you don't have to send it).
21. Who has been surprisingly accommodating to you and why? How did you feel about that?
22. What would your perfect vacation look like? Would you like to travel and see other places or stay at home?
23. What's the best thing about the actuallyautistic hashtag?
24. What kind of research would you like to see about autism? What things are you most curious about and/or what research would be most beneficial for you?
25. What helps you regain energy?
26. Silly task: Are there foods you like or dislike to eat? Let's draw them with funny faces!
27. What do you do, when energy runs low? What strategies help you through the day?
28. Have you ever been abroad? How does being in a different culture compare to being autistic for you?
29. Do you have a favourite stim toy? Share an image and tell us how you obtained it!
30. What makes you happy about being autistic?
31. What would you like to share with your fellow neurodiverse fellows here on the fediverse? Feel free to post!
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Okay, this book got real weird real fast. I have so many questions, but I guess I'll just have to keep reading.
(comment on HEX)
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Just grabbed a recipe off of gopher. It was amazing. No dodging ads. No popups. No cookie settings. Just the recipe I wanted.
This only served to reinforce for me what trash the modern web is.
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"Invalid" Links
Whenever I see a post with an "invalid" (e.g.: gemini, gopher) link, there doesn't appear to be a way to see what the original link was short of hopping over to the post on the originating server. Is there some way I can get this information from my local server? Being able to copy it to clipboard so I can open it with an appropriate client would be nice.
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@Rainer "friendica" Sokoll I'm told Dillo does(?)
That said, I'd like to be able to at least copy the link to put it somewhere useful.
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Ah, I see. Yes, that is not optimal.
next test:
someweirdprotocol://example.org
@beerw0lf @juliancday
This one works too:
But Kennedy is a good choice and comes with some useful tools.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
gemini://auragem.ddns.net/search/ is another one.
I prefer kennedy when it works, but it had its share of downtimes recently
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We made burgers for dinner last night. Now the whole apartment still smells like burgers.
I suppose there are worse things it could smell like.
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Me: fumbles with phone
Phone: did you mean to pull down the notification shade?
Me: NOOOO!!!
Phone: Here are all of your notifications for you to peruse while listening to your ringtone becoming increasingly frantic!
Me: No, no, no! Just let me answer the phone!!!
<swipes up frantically>
Phone: Yes, sir, I will let you scroll up to view more notifications! I know you certainly were not trying to dismiss the notification shade, considering how important that is at a time like this.
Me: NOOoOooOOooo!! Get away, let me answer the call! Ahhhhh!!!!
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Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • •Karsten Johansson
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Karsten Johansson • •Karsten Johansson
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Ironically nearly nobody understands quantum computers. Otherwise we'd be using them in a practical way by now.
Having said that, Lisp is generally the language used in developing around quantum devices.
Lorenzo Isella
in reply to Karsten Johansson • • •Karsten Johansson
in reply to Lorenzo Isella • • •@larry77 Lisp is a symbolic language, which lends itself handily to the symbolic data inherent to quantum computing. You'll see a lot of macro use as a result.
And Lisp is interactive. So is Python, but you don't have nearly the amount of malleability for experimentation with Python. The fact that you can move things around without breaking the code counts when you're dealing with multiple individual qbits.
curtosis
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Yep, quite a few places, though they generally don’t talk about it much. Quantum computing, chip design, logistics, and drug discovery are a few that come to mind.
If I were to make a broad generalization, they tend to be fields where deep subject and algorithmic expertise is more valuable than relatively more-easily-replaced developers.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
curtosis
in reply to curtosis • • •Which is, of course, not to say that e.g. Python/JavaScript/etc developers don’t also need subject matter expertise, but the necessary understanding is generally shallower and less entangled with the algorithmic complexity.
(Again, painting with a very broad brush here.)
There’s also an axis of software lifecycle, too. If you’re constantly changing requirements it’s less valuable to remember last year’s nuances. Different economics than if you need to ship something stable for years.
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Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to curtosis • •@curtosis I have to say, the kind of job that would be looking for Lisp developers sounds like the kind of environment I might actually want to work in. I've been pretty depressed about the state of the modern tech industry.
The last dev job I had kinda burnt me out because every month or so, I was on to an entirely different project and never had a chance to develop that deep level of domain knowledge on anything. It was very frustrating.
sigue
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
Judy Anderson
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •cosmos.phy.tufts.edu/~kdo/
KDO's Home Page
cosmos.phy.tufts.eduJonathan Lamothe likes this.
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Karsten Johansson
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •The software used by Presto was initially written in Lisp. I have no idea where it stands now, but I assume it's still the case.
Presto is the payment system for damn near every transit system where I live.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
aerique
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •I will be releasing (the alpha version of) a social media meta-client one of these weeks.
It works on desktop, Android and #SailfishOS. But I don't know if a one man shop counts for your question.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
Kat
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •mousebot
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •vindarel
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •We gather example companies that we find here: github.com/azzamsa/awesome-lis… Mind you it's nothing official. There are job offers sometimes on reddit, but also on the two LinkedIn groups, sometimes on Twitter alone, and sometimes you get a direct message (happened).
There are many in the quantum space, such as HLR labs. reddit's /u/stylewarning works for it. They released the impressive Coalton and even contribute to SBCL.
HLR, Ravenpack and Keepit are probably still hiring.
GitHub - azzamsa/awesome-lisp-companies: Awesome Lisp Companies
GitHubvindarel
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Personally, as a solo developer, I use CL more and more in my stack, ditching Python the more I can. I wrote about it: lisp-journey.gitlab.io/blog/ru…
Instead of extending a Python software I write independent modules in CL. It works well for standalone scripts too (read a DB, process data, send everything to a FTP, to a web service, by email…) It's such a joy.
On Discord, we see some are in big tech©, wrote their personal tool in CL and now it's part of the team's stack.
#lisp #commonlisp
Running my 4th Common Lisp script in production© - you can do it too - Lisp journey
Lisp journeyscrewlisp reshared this.
vindarel
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •You can find here 2 interviews of small teams using CL. One "secretly", one in a great open-source product:
"questions to Alex Nygren of Kina Knowledge, using Common Lisp extensively in their document processing stack"
lisp-journey.gitlab.io/blog/li…
"Arnold Noronha of Screenshotbot: from Facebook and Java to Common Lisp."
lisp-journey.gitlab.io/blog/li…
#lisp #commonlisp
Lisp Interview: questions to Alex Nygren of Kina Knowledge, using Common Lisp extensively in their document processing stack - Lisp journey
Lisp journeyPaolo Amoroso
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Here is a list of companies that "use Lisp Extensively in their stack":
github.com/azzamsa/awesome-lis…
GitHub - azzamsa/awesome-lisp-companies: Awesome Lisp Companies
GitHubKonrad Hinsen
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Daniel Kochmański
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Red Rozenglass
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Zenie
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Nyxt browser is written in common lisp.
I'd say common lisp is alive and well.