One of the greatest pieces of software Apple ever produced is slowly dying because the company can't figure out how to sell it or whom to sell it to. The software is HyperCard, a simple programming ...
Almost by necessity, Apple grew out of the homebrew movement, in which enthusiasts swapped knowledge and parts for building computers, and were as much tinkerers and electrical engineers as they were ...
I remember in high school my friends and I put together a Hypercard program which integrated some TrueBasic graphics programs that did a simple "Orrey" simulation of the solar system, and an actually ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
HyperCard was amazing, especially when we remember what computing was like in 1987. It was certainly the first popular hypermedia program on the market. It combined database features in "cards" that ...
For all Apple’s obsessive secrecy, even its senior managers acknowledge with an on-stage wink that much of what they announce these days has already been predicted. In the run-up to WWDC, I saw ...
{Guest Post by trusted friend and Internet legal visionary David Johnson currently running Graphical Groupware a private legal game development company.} Livecode has launched a kickstarter campaign ...
A now-discontinued computer tool that allowed people to create their own software even if they didn’t have programming experience has been surprisingly influential. Last year I set out to build a ...
A free development environment with cross-platform features and easy interface creation is worth at least a few hours of your time to evaluate it. Many years ago, there was HyperCard, included free ...
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