+ read without being an expert in ancient languages and so that we
+ can delete a thousand lines of implement-ITERATE macrology from
+ the codebase.)
+
+Bruno Haible:
+ He devised an accurate continued-fraction-based implementation of
+ RATIONALIZE, replacing a less-accurate version inherited from
+ primordial CMUCL.
+
+Cyrus Harmon:
+ He fixed many PPC FFI and callback bugs. He ported Raymond Toy's
+ work on the generational garbage collector for PPC to Linux, finding
+ and fixing other SBCL bugs in the process.
+
+Matthias Hoelzl:
+ He reported and fixed COMPILE's misbehavior on macros.
+
+Daisuke Homma:
+ He added support for SunOS on x86 processors.
+
+ITA Software:
+ They hired Juho Snellman as a consultant to work on improvements to
+ SBCL, to be released into the public domain. The work they've funded
+ includes faster compilation, various improvements to the statistical
+ profiler, the SB-COVER code coverage tool, the interpreter-based
+ evaluator and the IR2-based single-stepper.
+
+Espen S Johnsen:
+ He provided an ANSI-compliant version of CHANGE-CLASS for PCL.
+
+Teemu Kalvas:
+ He worked on Unicode support for SBCL, including parsing the Unicode
+ character database, restoring the FAST-READ-CHAR optimization and
+ developing external format support.
+
+Dmitry Kalyanov:
+ His work was crucial in bringing the Windows backend forward; he
+ implemented pthreads and ported SB-THREAD to this platform.
+
+Yaroslav Kavenchuk:
+ He implemented several missing features and fixed many bugs in
+ the win32 port. He also worked on external-format support for
+ SB-ALIEN.
+
+Anton Kovalenko:
+ He introduced a safepoint-based stop-the-world protocol and greatly
+ contributed to features and bugfixes related to the Windows port.
+
+Richard M Kreyter:
+ He added documentation support for CLOS slot readers and writers,
+ provided several SB-POSIX and NetBSD patches, and cleaned up
+ several of the filesystem/pathname interfaces.
+
+Frederik Kuivinen:
+ He showed how to implement the DEBUG-RETURN functionality.