Hello
the ILISP project set up new mailing lists on the Sourceforge site.
The Sourceforge ILISP project page is at
http://sourceforge.net/projects/ilisp/
Following the link "Lists" will take you to the mailing lists
administration page. You can subscribe there.
There are four mailing lists:
1 - ilisp-announce
Subscribe to this list if you only want to receive public
announcements regarding ILISP.
2 - ilisp-devel
This is the list for people who want to be actively involved in
the development of ILISP.
3 - ilisp-help
This is the list for asking usage questions regarding ILISP.
4 - ilisp-cvs
Subscribe to this list *only* if you want to monitor the CVS
repository activity.
Most likely we will set up a 'ilisp-bugs' mailing list as well. For
the time being we will try to use Sourceforge bug tracking system.
Cheers
Marco Antoniotti
PS. ILISP 5.11 is on its way. Stay tuned.
--
Marco Antoniotti =============================================================
NYU Bioinformatics Group tel. +1 - 212 - 998 3488
719 Broadway 12th Floor fax +1 - 212 - 995 4122
New York, NY 10003, USA http://galt.mrl.nyu.edu/valis
Like DNA, such a language [Lisp] does not go out of style.
Paul Graham, ANSI Common Lisp
Hi
I should have added the following disclaimer.
Due to problems with the machine hosting the mailing list
·····@cons.org, the subscribers' list WILL NOT be automatically
transferred to Sourceforge. Please subscribe at your own convenience
through the Sourceforge site.
Please also note that the official ILISP site is currently unreachable
as well. (When it will come up again, it will also contain some
incorrect information).
Apologies for that.
Martin Cracauer has been doing whatever he can to fix this thing, but
he can only do so much. Thanks to him for all his support.
Cheers
--
Marco Antoniotti =============================================================
NYU Bioinformatics Group tel. +1 - 212 - 998 3488
719 Broadway 12th Floor fax +1 - 212 - 995 4122
New York, NY 10003, USA http://galt.mrl.nyu.edu/valis
Like DNA, such a language [Lisp] does not go out of style.
Paul Graham, ANSI Common Lisp