Which dialect was it and how did you do it?
Clojure is being used by some companies. If you count it as a real lisp.
>>2
Big if.
yes, I did Common Lisp consulting for a decade, it was lucrative. the mistake is to go searching for office jobs (though they also exist). if you want to jump start a consultancy down size your life as much as you can and then go looking for projects. it's fairly easy to find a no questions asked (as far as stack) 30-40k project, where a single developer lisp will be a massive advantage. but the last one I did was closer to 700k, took two of us about 8 months, fintech.
go looking for projects
Explain this to me, RIGHT NOW. There's no monster.com or equivalent for projects like this, so I don't know where you would even start.
>>4 Please tell us how you did it, you live the dream.
>>5-6
I'm pretty sure that when your a Lisp wizard, they will just contact you. I remember when David T. O’Toole author of Blocky went batshit paranoid and disappeared for some time because US Army asked him if he was interested in a position. It's in the w4c /prog/ archive if you want to read that story. Actually headhunters will give you a call even if you're merely a Ruby rock star.
Damn, this thread is depressing
https://arch.b4k.co/g/thread/86363517
So many gullible idiots.
>>8
I tried to look at that page but saw only inane comments. How is that relevant to this thread?
>>9
What do you mean job seeking threads about wannabe programmers in the industry isn't related to the thread's title?