Thursday, September 18, 2008

Lisp50@OOPSLA

...celebrating the 50th birthday of Lisp at OOPSLA 2008

Monday, October 20, 2008
Nashville, Tennessee, USA
co-located with OOPSLA 2008
participation is free for all OOPSLA participants
registration for at least one conference day at OOPSLA is required

URL: http:www.lisp50.org
Feed: http://lisp50.blogspot.com


Invited Speakers

  • William Clinger, Northeastern University, USA

  • Pascal Costanza, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

  • Richard Gabriel, IBM Research, USA

  • Rich Hickey, Independent Consultant, USA

  • Alan Kay, Viewpoints Research Institute, USA

  • Fritz Kunze, USA

  • Ora Lassila, Nokia Research Center, USA

  • John McCarthy, USA

  • Kent Pitman, HyperMeta Inc., USA

  • Guy Steele, Sun Microsystems Laboratories, USA

  • Herbert Stoyan, University of Erlangen, Germany

  • Warren Teitelman, Google Inc., USA

  • JonL White, USA


Titles, abstracts, biographies and schedule will be announced here and at the
Lisp50 webpage
in the coming days and weeks.


Abstract

In October 1958, John McCarthy published one in a series of reports about his then ongoing effort for designing a new programming language that would be especially suited for achieving artificial intelligence. That report was the first one to use the name LISP for this new programming language. 50 years later, Lisp is still in use. This year we are celebrating Lisp's 50th birthday. OOPSLA 2008 is an excellent venue for such a celebration, because object-oriented programming benefited heavily from Lisp ideas and because OOPSLA 2008 takes place in October, exactly 50 years after the name Lisp has been used publicly for the first time. We will have talks by John McCarthy himself, and numerous other influential Lispers from the past five decades. We will also take a look at the next 50 years of Lisp.


Organizers

  • Pascal Costanza, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

  • Richard Gabriel, IBM Research, Hawthorne, NY, USA

  • Robert Hirschfeld, Hasso-Plattner-Institut, Potsdam, Germany

  • Guy Steele, Sun Microsystems Laboratories, Burlington, MA, USA


Sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN


Supported by