My Symbolics computers (running Symbolics Ivory processors) run Lisp really well, as well as C - they have a C compiler.
I have operational computers of a variety of architectures at home, including the oldest generations (6502, 680x0), Sparc, Symbolics, DEC Alpha, MIPS 32- and 64-bit, etc., and even an extremely rare (and unfortunately not-running) Multiflow, the granddaddy of VLIW.
My favorite part of the original article was the final section. I wish we had a modern CPU renassiance akin to what was going on in the 80s and 90s, but the market dominance of x64 and ARM seems to be squelching things, with optimizations to those architectures rather than novel new ones (with possibly novel new compiler technologies). 64-bit ARM was a nice little improvement, though.
I have operational computers of a variety of architectures at home, including the oldest generations (6502, 680x0), Sparc, Symbolics, DEC Alpha, MIPS 32- and 64-bit, etc., and even an extremely rare (and unfortunately not-running) Multiflow, the granddaddy of VLIW.
My favorite part of the original article was the final section. I wish we had a modern CPU renassiance akin to what was going on in the 80s and 90s, but the market dominance of x64 and ARM seems to be squelching things, with optimizations to those architectures rather than novel new ones (with possibly novel new compiler technologies). 64-bit ARM was a nice little improvement, though.