Mar. 6th, 2005

cellio: (caffeine)
[livejournal.com profile] kayre had a good idea (which she in turn got from [livejournal.com profile] city_of_dis). My LJ friends come from a number of different and sometimes-intersecting circles. There are my local (and formerly-local) friends, the SCA folks, the filkers, the Jewish community, and several others. Many of you don't know each other but perhaps you should.

So this is your chance. If you feel inclined, say something about yourself here -- not addressed to me, but to the other readers of my journal who might turn out to be friends you didn't know you have.
cellio: (sleepy-cat)
Obligatory Frienditto thingy: I'm not using it (really see no point; my journal is archived on LJ and on my computer). I expect that no one on my friends' list would violate my trust by publicly posting locked entries. I presume the tempest in the teapot will die down Real Soon Now.

Shabbat was pleasant. Saturday morning a young man who was bar mitzvah last summer read torah for our minyan (for the second time since his bar mitzvah). I'm glad that he's continuing to both attend and participate, and that he feels comfortable reading in front of our group.

The start-up that Dani works for has a major deadline Monday, so he worked all day Saturday. And all evening, and night. Whee. I met him for dinner after Shabbat and then met his co-workers. When we walked in the lead engineer turned to me and said something like "ready to write some LISP?". I said "LISP? I thought you were a Java shop", and he shrugged and started talking about something else. So I gave it no further thought at the time, figuring it was some sort of odd joke or something. (I just assumed that Dani had, somewhere along the line, talked about his wife the former LISPer.)

I asked Dani about it today, and he said that, in fact, one third-party tool they have to intergrate with has an API that resembles a cross between C and LISP. I didn't ask for details, but he said there's clearly a LISP interpreter under there somewhere because they get error messages that include names of LISP functions. Weird.

It's been almost 15 years since I wrote LISP professionally, but it was a fantastic language and if I'd known the guy was serious, I would have asked him to tell me more. I'd have been willing to give them a couple hours. (I have another friend there too.) Now, it probably wouldn't have been a net savings for him, because he would have had to teach me enough about the application to be useful, but...

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags