I think most of us have gotten over it by now... *grin*. But, there are still some folks around who want to revive it, even though SuperCard and Revolution are still around.

The greatest thing about HyperCard was that it was approachable by the non-geek. I work in education, and have for the majority of my professional life. Teachers don't generally have the time to learn a large, complicated language and IDE. HyperCard let you drag some pieces together and MAKE A THING THAT WORKED! Of course, those of us who are geek-enabled could build pieces that would help in that effort. Because it was free (for most of its lifetime) people didn't have trouble sharing their solutions.

On Jan 5, 2007, at 10:09 AM, Stefan wrote:
I feel that people tend to love HyperCard - still. Am I wrong?
If not: What's so great regarding Hypercard?

--
Bruce Carter, Senior Systems Engineer http://www.nd.edu/ ~bcarter/ Center for Creative Computing, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556


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