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By 1994, Lucid's attempts to reinvent itself as a C++ company, and its neglect of its still profitable Lisp sideline had ended in failure, and the company's revenues fell to levels which could not sustain it. Lucid
Incorporated went
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by in essence rewriting a lesser version of the Lisp machine IDE for use on a more cost-effective and less moribund architecture. In 1987, Gabriel resigned as
President, but remained its CTO.
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This article is about the 1984-1994 software company. For other companies, see
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The product the company ultimately shipped was an integrated Lisp
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hardware architecture—this sidestepped the principal failure of
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Open
Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution
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Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution
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469:Lisp (programming language) software companies
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266:Eventually Lucid's focus shifted (during the
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190:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
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440:"Letter to Chris DiBona and Tim O'Reilly"
210:Learn how and when to remove this message
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345:History of programming languages---II
188:adding citations to reliable sources
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148:in 1984, it went bankrupt in 1994.
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18:Lucid (disambiguation)
433:Patterns of Software
408:"Liquid Common Lisp"
184:improve this section
316:Xanalys Corporation
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146:Richard P. Gabriel
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182:Please help
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83:Headquarters
232:IntelliCorp
228:Tony Slocum
122:Lucid Emacs
463:Categories
414:2013-06-10
393:2009-12-12
368:2023-05-02
326:References
222:The first
200:April 2013
138:California
134:Menlo Park
98:Key people
91:California
87:Menlo Park
24:Lucid Inc.
320:LispWorks
288:GNU Emacs
268:AI Winter
171:does not
387:Archived
304:bankrupt
274:IDE for
142:software
117:Products
29:Industry
262:Decline
192:removed
177:sources
152:History
65: (
57:Defunct
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39:Founded
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296:XEmacs
132:was a
479:Emacs
284:Emacs
357:ISBN
252:RISC
246:for
226:was
175:any
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49:1984
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276:C++
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