I never really used Hypercard, or Amiga Vision, but I’m wondering why this isn’t a thing today? Or why those things went out of fashion?
@helge afaik steve jobs killed hypercards. it wasn't about fashion, but focus on other stuff.
@blazr He may have killed the particular product, but I wonder why there hasn't been a replacement / similar thing. The idea that regular users can write programs seems nice? I don't think that really exists anymore, or does it? (Access or FileMaker seem to be in a similar bracket)

@helge @blazr My experience is two fold:
(1) the interest by users in building things has dramatically declined, we [IT dept] used to have to actively work against people building thier own stacks, that's just not as true now.
(2) corporate users have [hot garbage IMO] like Flows and PowerAutomate, which are officially sanctioned.

That doesn't leave a lot of space for low-code development .

@whitemice @blazr Fair, but that's business stuff, I think Hypercard was targeted more at individuals doing their things?
Swift Playgrounds kinda tries to go there, but it seems way too complicated for the audience.
@helge @blazr That falls under (1). Individuals use Google Forms, etc... but the building-computer-stuff seems very reduced. Many of the younger people are very tipped toward low-tech solutions, even anti-tech. Attitudes are very different than when I was in my 20s. So I think the remaining space just isn't that big --- and Python seems to take a lot of the space for people with an interest.
@whitemice @blazr The new Myst, now coming to your Google Forms 🙃