----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@MSGID:
<8a6ba6c7-9de7-48c3-8219-b7b077ba7ddan@googlegroups.com> 16165629
@REPLY: 5gQyk5Ea+P@bongo-ra.co> 6455b875
@REPLYADDR kenichi sasagawa <kenstkc@gmail.com>
@REPLYTO 2:5075/128 kenichi sasagawa
@CHRS: CP866 2
@RFC: 1 0
@RFC-References:
<bc1c759c-9724-45df-b9a0-b86f8b2247d2n@googlegroups.com> 5gQyk5Ea+P@bongo-ra.co>
@RFC-Message-ID:
<8a6ba6c7-9de7-48c3-8219-b7b077ba7ddan@googlegroups.com>
@TZUTC: -0700
@PID: G2/1.0
@TID: FIDOGATE-5.12-ge4e8b94
> > Please note that this implementation is not intended for practical use;
> > rather, it`s meant for learning and enjoying computational experiments.
> In what way it is not intended for practical use ?
Thank you for your comment. During my childhood, I enjoyed building
audio amplifiers and radios. I would buy vacuum tubes and transistors,
then assemble them using circuit diagrams from hobby magazines. The
quality was quite poor - the amplifier was filled with noise. However, I
had a good understanding of how they worked and gained a sense of
accomplishment. Modern programming languages are incredibly capable. However, on the
other hand, their high level of sophistication makes it difficult to grasp
their internals. I thought that a simple Lisp implementation could give me
the same sense of wonder I experienced in my childhood. Early PCs only
had 640KB of memory and relied solely on floppy disks. Compared to
today`s operating systems, MS-DOS seemed like a toy, but it brought me a
lot of programming enjoyment.
--- G2/1.0
* Origin: usenet.network (2:5075/128)
SEEN-BY: 5001/100 5005/49 5015/255 5019/40 5020/715
848 1042 4441 12000
SEEN-BY: 5030/49 1081 5058/104 5075/128
@PATH: 5075/128 5020/1042 4441