OpenMetal is an automated bare metal and on-demand private cloud provider.
Large Scale. Cloud Native. Fixed Costs.
OpenMetal is an automated bare metal and on-demand private cloud provider. Our mission is to empower your team with cost effective private infrastructure that outperforms traditional public cloud.
Readable Lisp/S-expressions with infix, functions, and indentation
This project is dedicated to developing more readable format(s) for Lisp-based languages (such as Common Lisp and Scheme) and implementing those formats (readers, pretty-printers, editor macros, etc.). MIT license preferred, to spread them widely.
RSLisp is a new dialect of Lisp which works on the NET Framework with a special compilation/interpretation model. If you wish you can download the source and build it yourself for Linux (requires Mono Framework), but I don't promise that it'll work
xacc.ide is a opensource IDE aimed at mainly .NET development. It has a code editor written in 100% C# code, which is faster than most commercial offerings.
ClearLisp is a Common Lisp interpreter written in C# with a large library including all of .NET and an extensive object model. Supports IIS and XSP or Apache with mono. Includes sample code of a personal, file based wiki web application.
Pylon is an All-in-one B2B Support Platform for modern B2B businesses.
Pylon is a modern support system that integrates with all B2B channels like Slack and Team.
We bring together everything a post-sales teams team needs including a ticketing system, B2B omnichannel integrations (Slack Connect, Microsoft Teams), modern chat widget, knowledge base, AI support bot, account management, customer marketing, and more.
Xbvl is the Lisp dialect used at University Paris 8
Its main features are :
* Automatic optimizations of Lisp code
* Possibility to add additional activities to Lisp functions, instructions and variables. These activities don't affect the p
kin is a set of libraries and tools supporting meta-programming for engineering and technical computing applications. This JVM version of kin has been superseded by the stand-alone version being developed at http://purl.org/net/kin.