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* [[Interlisp]]<ref name="5CtB3">{{Cite book |url=http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/xerox/interlisp/1974_InterlispRefMan.pdf |title=InterLisp Reference Manual |first=Warren |last=Teitelman |year=1974 |access-date=2006-08-19 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060602134835/http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/xerox/interlisp/1974_InterlispRefMan.pdf |archive-date=2006-06-02}}</ref> – developed at [[BBN Technologies]] for PDP-10 systems running the [[TENEX (operating system)|TENEX operating system]], later adopted as a "West coast" Lisp for the Xerox Lisp machines as [[InterLisp-D]]. A small version called "InterLISP 65" was published for the [[MOS Technology 6502]]-based [[Atari 8-bit computers]]. Maclisp and InterLisp were strong competitors.
* [[Franz Lisp]] – originally a [[University of California, Berkeley]] project; later developed by Franz Inc. The name is a humorous deformation of the name "[[Franz Liszt]]", and does not refer to [[Allegro Common Lisp]], the dialect of Common Lisp sold by Franz Inc., in more recent years.
* [[muLISP]] – initially developed by Rich and Stoutemyer for small microcomputer systems running CP/M later ported to MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. This dialect was able to run on small systems having 64 KB of RAM. The mathematical Software "Derive" which was written in muLISP, was widely used in education.
* [[XLISP]], which [[AutoLISP]] was based on.
* [[Standard Lisp]] and [[Portable Standard Lisp]] were widely used and ported, especially with the Computer Algebra System REDUCE.
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