Association of Lisp Users - meaning and definition. What is Association of Lisp Users
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What (who) is Association of Lisp Users - definition

AUSTRALIAN MAGAZINE
Australian ZX Users Association; Australian Sinclair Gazette

Association of Lisp Users      
<body> (ALU) A user group which aims to promote Lisp, help inform and educate Lisp users in general, and help represent Lisp users as a group to the vendors. The ALU holds an annual conference and supports the formation of inter-vendor standards. ALU has international membership and is incorporated in the US. http://cs.rochester.edu/u/miller/ALU/home.html. Usenet newsgroups: news:comp.org.lisp-users news:comp.std.lisp. Mailing list: <alu@ai.sri.com>. (1996-12-07)
LISP 1.5         
  • 4.3 BSD]] from the [[University of Wisconsin]], displaying the [[man page]] for [[Franz Lisp]]
  • pointer]] diagram for the list (42 69 613)
  • A [[Lisp machine]] in the [[MIT Museum]]
FUNCTIONAL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE BASED ON THE LAMBDA CALCULUS
LISP programming language; Lisp computer language; Lisp atom; Lisp language; LISP language; LISP (programming language); LISP atom; Lisp programming language; LISP (programming); Lisp (programming); Programmable programming language; Lisp renaissance; LISP 1.5; Lisp 1.5; Lithp (programming language); Defun; List Processing; LISP; List processing language; Lisp (language); MuLISP; Lots of Irritating Superfluous Parentheses; Lisp operators; History of the Lisp programming language; Lambde expressions in Lisp; Control structures in Lisp; Object systems in Lisp
The second version of Lisp, successor to LISP 1. Developed at MIT in 1959. Followed by LISP 1.75, LISP 1.9, Lisp 2 and many other versions.
BBN LISP         
DIALECT OF THE LISP PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
BBN Lisp
BBN LISP (also stylized BBN-Lisp) was a dialect of the Lisp programming language by Bolt, Beranek and Newman Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Wikipedia

Australian ZX Users' Association

The Australian ZX Users' Association (AZUA) was an Australian computer users' group established in 1981 to support users of the Sinclair ZX80 and Sinclair ZX81 computers. It closed in 1986 after producing thirty-nine issues of its magazine AZUA and the Australian Sinclair Gazette.

AZUA was the idea of David Brudenall and David Vernon and they remained the editor and assistant editor, respectively, throughout the five years of its operation. Based in Canberra, Australia, AZUA was a non-profit association. It originally catered solely for the ZX80 but later supported the ZX81, ZX Spectrum and Sinclair QL produced by Clive Sinclair. AZUA published computer program listings, software reviews, provided technical assistance and the occasional short story. It also supported and promoted local user groups in all Australian States and Territories. The magazines became known for their quirky cartoons, all drawn by David Brudenall. Most of the content was written by David Brudenall or David Vernon, although reader contributions were readily included.

During the early 1980s it was the largest ZX user group in Australia. When the ZX Spectrum was introduced and members with the ZX computers dropped away, AZUA changed its name to the Australian Sinclair Gazette. Six editions of the Australian Sinclair Gazette were produced before AZUA ceased operations. The reason given for the closure was the increased competition from overseas magazines, Sinclair User and ZX Computing, and the reduction in marketing of the Sinclair computers in Australia.