The truth about Lisps

Lisps have been around for quite some time now, lisps are made everyday and this post is about building your very fist understanding of the lisp, thats if you are new to internet and do not yet know what a lisp is. If you have a lisp or any other speech impediment it is not about that, this is the computer lisp, perhaps you have heard about lisp building?

Creating your very own lisp takes knowledge of language and in order to continue learning requires a personal amount of persuasion, you will probably want to do this from your home at some point, if you are a computer programmer you will already be having a lisp and hopefully your knowledge of lisps will also be increasing, especially since the lisp has been about now well over 50 years. Thats why many internet geeks have been associated with things like this. The crest you see to the right is from the same school as the film A beautiful Mind.


At the heart of the technological advances of mathematics and science we see the same old lisps building built, the basic principles of any equation and translating it into computer language is complicated in that it is often very large due to the limited amount of 1, and zero's space in developing specific functions and by building on these functions the lisps become more varied, its little wonder why there are so many programming books these days. Additionally the software created has made understanding these lisps a lot easier to do, and similarly at the same time these basic principles are being forgotten. Many websites you see and buy these days are just simple templates rinsed and mass produced for people to buy, similarly driving traffic to these lisps is also very cumbersome and requires a whole heap of time dedicated to sorting this sort of behaviour out.


The backbone of the lisp was a derivative of the New Light Presbyterians dream. This type of education developed in Jersey USA was a milestone and very pioneering, although still stooped in educational theology the students were free to practise what they wanted, and were given a voice to develop new ideas.

First, identify clear marketing goals for your site, such as generating leads, building a database of potential customers' names and e-mail addresses, or putting a product catalog online to save the time and expense of printing and mailing. Quantify your objectives-such as increasing sales by 15 percent-so you know whether or not your site is successful. Then, figure out what your potential customers need to know before buying your products and services. This might include:

An overview of your company, its products and services, and their applications Complete product or service descriptions, including features, key benefits, pricing, product specifications, and other information, for each product or service Testimonials, case studies, or success stories so customers can see how similar individuals or organisations have worked with you ;An FAQ section that anticipates and answers customers' common issues. Plan the structure of your site, focusing on making it easy for customers to learn what they need to know, make a purchase decision, and then buy quickly. Create a site map that outlines every page on your site from the home page down and how customers get from one page to the next. Use tools that quantitatively measure site activity-where customers are clicking, how often, and whether they end up purchasing-and then compare the results with your goals.


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