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Additional information about the history and features of Poplog can be found in the entries for POP-2 and POP-11.
The chief architect of Poplog, responsible for many innovations related to making an incrementally compiled system portable, and providing support for a collection of languages was John Gibson, at Sussex University, though the earliest work was done by Steve Hardy.
Chris Mellish helped with the initial Prolog implementation in POP-11.
John Williams, working under supervision of Jonathan Cunningham implemented the Common Lisp subsystem.
Robert Duncan and Simon Nichols added Standard ML.
Between about 1980 and 1991 the project was managed by Aaron Sloman, until he went to the University of Birmingham, though he continued to collaborate with Sussex and ISL on Poplog development after that.
Since 1999 he has been responsible for the main Poplog web site, as well as some of the extensions to be found there, listed under POP-11.

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