From http://www.gigamonkeys.com/book/introduction-why-lisp.html
One of the most commonly repeated
myths about Lisp is that it's "dead."
While it's true that Common Lisp isn't
as widely used as, say, Visual Basic
or Java, it seems strange to describe
a language that continues to be used
for new development and that continues
to attract new users as "dead." Some
recent Lisp success stories include
Paul Graham's Viaweb, which became
Yahoo Store when Yahoo bought his
company; ITA Software's airfare
pricing and shopping system, QPX, used
by the online ticket seller Orbitz and
others; Naughty Dog's game for the
PlayStation 2, Jak and Daxter, which
is largely written in a
domain-specific Lisp dialect Naughty
Dog invented called GOAL, whose
compiler is itself written in Common
Lisp; and the Roomba, the autonomous
robotic vacuum cleaner, whose software
is written in L, a downwardly
compatible subset of Common Lisp.
Perhaps even more telling is the
growth of the Common-Lisp.net Web
site, which hosts open-source Common
Lisp projects, and the number of local
Lisp user groups that have sprung up
in the past couple of years.