+ giving SBCL (and CMU CL) EQUALP hash tables.
+
+Douglas Crosher:
+ He continued to improve CMU CL after SBCL forked from it, creating
+ many patches which were directly applicable to SBCL. Notable examples
+ include fixes for various compiler bugs, and a generalization
+ of the type system's handling of the CONS type to allow ANSI-style
+ (CONS FOO BAR) types.
+
+Alexey Dejneka:
+ He has fixed many bugs in SBCL. There's no single summary theme, but
+ he's fixed about a dozen different bugs in LOOP alone, and it appears
+ that a lot of his fixes there and elsewhere reflect systematic
+ public-spiritedness, fixing bugs as they show up in sbcl-devel or as
+ archived in the BUGS file.
+
+Nathan Froyd:
+ He has reported bugs and ported fixes from CMU CL. He has fixed
+
+Robert MacLachlan:
+ He has continued to answer questions about, and contribute fixes to,
+ the CMU CL project. Some of these fixes, especially for compiler
+ problems, has been invaluable to the CMU CL project and, by
+ porting, invaluable to the SBCL project as well.
+
+Bill Newman:
+ He continued to maintain SBCL after the fork, increasing ANSI
+ compliance, fixing bugs, regularizing the internals of the
+ system, deleting unused extensions, improving performance in
+ some areas (especially sequence functions and non-simple vectors),
+ updating documentation, and even, for better or worse, getting
+ rid of various functionality (e.g. the byte interpreter).
+
+Christophe Rhodes:
+ He has done various low-level work on SBCL, especially for the
+ SPARC port (and for CPU-architecture-neutral things motivated by
+ it, like *BACKEND-FEATURES*). He's also contributed miscellaneous
+ bug fixes.
+
+Raymond Toy:
+ He continued to work on CMU CL after the SBCL fork, especially on
+ floating point stuff. Various patches and fixes of his have been
+ ported to SBCL.