#+TITLE: Lisp Machine Bootstrap #+AUTHOR: Amr #+CREATED: [2026-03-22 Sun] #+BEGIN_COMMENT The "Endgame": Bootstrapping a true, hardware-native Lisp machine to achieve ultimate digital sovereignty. #+END_COMMENT * Vision: The Sovereign Silicon The Lisp Machine Bootstrap project aims to remove the "Unix/C Tax"—the layers of opaque C code, complex Unix kernels, and generic hardware that currently underpin modern computing. By building a machine where Lisp is the native language from the gates up to the UI, we create a system that is provably secure, homoiconic, and entirely under user sovereignty. * Philosophy: Tagged, Homoiconic, and Bare-Metal - **Hardware-Native Lisp:** Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) optimized for Lisp (CAR, CDR, CONS as hardware instructions). - **Tagged Memory:** Memory management handled by the hardware, preventing buffer overflows and memory corruption by design. - **Removing the C Core:** Eliminating the reliance on C-based kernels. The "Kernel" is a small Lisp bootstrapper. - **FPGA First:** Utilizing Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) as the initial prototyping environment. * The Bootstrap Path 1. **Phase 1: Soft Machine (Current):** Emacs/CL running on Linux (The "Simulator"). 2. **Phase 2: Virtual Machine:** Develop a specialized Lisp VM that abstracts away the Linux kernel. 3. **Phase 3: FPGA Implementation:** Port the VM to an FPGA core (Verilog/VHDL). 4. **Phase 4: Sovereign Silicon:** Synthesize to a custom RISC-V or dedicated Lisp ASIC. * Initial Research & Tasks See the actionable tasks for this project in [[file:../../gtd.org::*Lisp Machine Bootstrap][GTD.org > Projects > Lisp Machine Bootstrap]] * Status - [X] Project Seeded - [ ] Research existing Lisp-on-FPGA implementations (e.g., Openora, Symbolics replicas) - [ ] Define minimum hardware-native Lisp ISA - [ ] Draft initial Verilog/VHDL skeleton * Links - [[file:../org-agent/][Orchestration: org-agent Microkernel]] - [[file:../agora/][Social Layer: Agora Protocol]]