On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 11:26 AM, wrote:
>
> Maybe you don't even need a crowdfunding project, if we find enough people
> this way?
It really can't hurt. Maybe it could even ×10 (or more) the founds.
On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 8:09 PM, Heow Goodman wrote:
> If we're talking small potatoes, I'm su
> From: Alexander Burger
> [...] And I can assure you that PicoLisp will never be a closed
> system.
>
> My personal opintion has always been that developments should be shared,
> and that the term "intellectual property" per se is unethical.
Well said. If/when other implementations try to compe
If we're talking small potatoes, I'm sure there are a number of US
entities (ALU, LispNYC) that would happily front their EIN for a cool
kickstarter.
On 2014-9-22, 5:26 AM, andr...@itship.ch wrote:
> Once more, congratulation! This is awesome!
> I really believe this is/will be huge.
>
> 1. kicks
Hi Sandeep and Andreas!
Thanks for your support :)
Andreas, thanks for your great inputs! It's indeed what we are looking forward.
With everyone showing support and interest really is a motivation booster and
now i'm preparing myself to next stage which is synthesizing the Verilog code
to be u
Once more, congratulation! This is awesome!
I really believe this is/will be huge.
1. kickstarter
Afaik you need a US tax number to use kickstarter, so either a us citizen
oder better a us company is necessary. It's possible to do a setup by
creating a cheap delaware company, I know guys who did i
Oh boy! I've been thinking of something like this for a while.
What is the low-hanging fruit here, in the sense of, what applications might we
do faster/cheaper/better in hardware like this, than can be done otherwise?
The idea of pilog in hardware excites me too ... maybe time to go back and
On Sat, Sep 20, 2014 at 11:06 AM, Jakob Eriksson
wrote:
>
>
> On September 19, 2014 at 7:32 PM Thorsten Jolitz
> wrote:
> > "Loyall, David"
> > writes:
> >
> > > The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the
> > > verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
>
On September 19, 2014 at 7:32 PM Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> "Loyall, David"
> writes:
>
> > The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the
> > verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
>
> I think this has the potential to make a very nice and successfull
> kic
Hi Loyall,
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 08:53:00PM +, Loyall, David wrote:
> > From: Thorsten Jolitz
> > > It's a Lisp machine. It probably shouldn't be born crippled (with
> > > closed design). :)
> >
> > I'm sure its technical design is not crippled at all.
>
> I am new to your mailing list an
Dear Alex,
> we are proud to announce PilMCU, the Lisp Machine on a Chip! :)
Fantastic! This is truly amazing. Congratulations!
R
On 19 September 2014 17:09, Alexander Burger wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> we are proud to announce PilMCU, the Lisp Machine on a Chip! :)
>
> We, that is George Orais
Hi Rick,
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 10:14:20AM -0400, Rick Lyman wrote:
> How about an indiegogo or kickstarter project for a FPGA board that would
> plug into this:
>
> http://www.raspberrypi.org/products/compute-module-development-kit/
>
> or this:
>
> https://www.sparkfun.com/products/13097
>
Good morning everyone!
Wow! thanks for all this nice feedback's, a nice way to greet a morning weekend
:)
Btw sorry if i cannot individually reply on each topic, but let me share my
thoughts on this two topic that is recently on the table:
1. Kickstarter or Indigogo
2. Verilog source code avail
Christophe Gragnic
writes:
> On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 10:53 PM, Loyall, David
> wrote:
>> If you sell a FPGA configured to be an open source Lisp CPU, I'll
>> buy a few
>
> Someone on Hacker News: «where's the kickstarter page? I want a few of
> those.»
> I'd buy a few too.
Thats the idea, I wou
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 10:53 PM, Loyall, David
wrote:
> If you sell a FPGA configured to be an open source Lisp CPU, I'll buy a few
Someone on Hacker News: «where's the kickstarter page? I want a few of those.»
I'd buy a few too.
chri
--
http://profgra.org/lycee/ (site pro)
http://delicious
> From: Thorsten Jolitz
> > It's a Lisp machine. It probably shouldn't be born crippled (with
> > closed design). :)
>
> I'm sure its technical design is not crippled at all.
I am new to your mailing list and as such I'd like to listen more than I speak.
But please don't speak for me. :) It s
"Loyall, David"
writes:
>> From: Thorsten Jolitz
>> "Loyall, David" writes:
>> > The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the
>> > verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
>>
>> I think this has the potential to make a very nice and successfull
>> kickstart
Hi Thorsten,
> I suggest to proceed in 2 steps:
> 1. make me a team member
> 2. repeat the {Microsoft|Apple}-Story
> ;-)
Great! That's the way to go! ;-)
> I think I have VC-Companies and Robotics-Research-Faculties in my
> neighborhood, so once you have a business-idea based on PilMCU's USPs
This has made it to #4 on Hacker News (https://news.ycombinator.com). That’s
pretty impressive, Alex!
—
Rand--
UNSUBSCRIBE: mailto:picolisp@software-lab.de?subject=Unsubscribe
> From: Thorsten Jolitz
> "Loyall, David" writes:
> > The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the
> > verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
>
> I think this has the potential to make a very nice and successfull kickstarter
> project, so why not try to bui
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 7:08 PM, Loyall, David
wrote:
>
> The Internet would like to run this locally.
Yes !
> Would you post the verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
Now PicoLisp should not be jealous of BF anymore:
https://github.com/briandef/bf16
(Quite funny that Alex
"Loyall, David"
writes:
> The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the
> verilog source and build files? Or a link to a repository?
I think this has the potential to make a very nice and successfull
kickstarter project, so why not try to build a business idea around it
inste
> From: picolisp@software-lab.de [mailto:picolisp@software-lab.de] On Behalf Of
> George Orais
> [...] pilMCU is running under Icarus Verilog Simulator [...]
Nice.
The Internet would like to run this locally. Would you post the verilog source
and build files? Or a link to a repository?
Che
Hi Alex!
First of all, thanks for the wonderful tool PicoLisp and also for giving me
this opportunity to work with you on this exciting project :)
Please let me share some of the exciting feature that we can provide especially
on the embedded perspective.
Hi Everyone!
I am Geo and i'm curren
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 03:25:09PM +0200, Jakob Eriksson wrote:
> > > Funds should flow in when "picoLisp OS" is seen running with all
> > > virtues, on existing hardware.
> >
> > Hmm, but this is a bit against the point, isn't it? This *is* a hardware
> > project. On existing hardware you may be s
Both Jakob and Alex are right!
1. PicoLisp has to "infiltrate" existing real metal hardware to
demonstrate/appeal to less techy, in general people with VC.
2. Comparative benchmarks on same underlying hardware will be helpful to
showcase.
Great news and good work! Congratulations!
I second what Joe wrote a bit earlier, it truly is inspiring to see
PicoLisp improve.
best regards,
Mattias
On 19 September 2014 15:24, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> Alexander Burger writes:
>
> Hi Alex (and George),
>
> > we are proud to announce PilMCU,
How about an indiegogo or kickstarter project for a FPGA board that would
plug into this:
http://www.raspberrypi.org/products/compute-module-development-kit/
or this:
https://www.sparkfun.com/products/13097
or this:
http://www.mouser.com/new/Freescale-Semiconductor/freescale_tower_system/?gcli
On September 19, 2014 at 3:05 PM Alexander Burger wrote:
> Hi Alabhya,
>
> > Funds should flow in when "picoLisp OS" is seen running with all
> > virtues, on existing hardware.
>
> Hmm, but this is a bit against the point, isn't it? This *is* a hardware
> project. On existing hardware you may be
Alexander Burger writes:
Hi Alex (and George),
> we are proud to announce PilMCU, the Lisp Machine on a Chip! :)
though not really a hardware/low-level guy, I think this sounds pretty
exiting!
> How shall we proceed? We need investors (or crowdfunding) to polish,
> manufacture and distribute t
Hi Alex - congratulations... It's really inspiring to see picoLisp keep
improving and branching out. It really has staying power
This might be off base, but is it within the realm of possibility to
run PilMCU on a raspberry pi now or in the future? That's an accessible
piece of hardware that many
Hi Alabhya,
> Congratulations to both of you on this important feat!
Thanks!
> Funds should flow in when "picoLisp OS" is seen running with all
> virtues, on existing hardware.
Hmm, but this is a bit against the point, isn't it? This *is* a hardware
project. On existing hardware you may be serv
Congratulations to both of you on this important feat!
Funds should flow in when "picoLisp OS" is seen running with all virtues, on
existing hardware.
Looking for introductory level material on this to present to educational
institutions, for them to realize value of this project.
Fantastic, this is truly great. I have been hoping for years
someone would pull this off.
Congratulations.
best regards,
Jakob
On September 19, 2014 at 1:39 PM Alexander Burger wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> we are proud to announce PilMCU, the Lisp Machine on a Chip! :)
>
> We, that is George Orai
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