πŸ“• Node [[hypercard]]
πŸ“„ hypercard.md by @neil οΈπŸ”— ✍️

HyperCard

A kind of visual [[hypertext]].

πŸ“„ hypercard.myco by @melanocarpa οΈπŸ”— ✍️

HyperCard was an early hypermedia platform. This hypha is an attempt to collect some relevant links and cool stuff.

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Decker is a multimedia platform for creating and sharing interactive documents, with sound, images, hypertext, and scripted behavior. It draws strong influence from HyperCard, as well as more modern "no-code" or "low-code" creative tools like Twine and Bitsy. If Jupyter Notebooks are a digital lab notebook, think of Decker as a stack of sticky notes.

Seems like it finally exists. Looks like a classic Mac screen and is open source!

A simulator!

A zine!

A video!

Archive.org emulators

They run in the browser. It takes some time to load them.

πŸ“„ hypercard.md by @ryan

HyperCard

HyperCard was an [[Apple]] application that allowed users to create little programs contained to a card. It was one of the first instances of [[hypermedia]].

Links

πŸ“„ Hypercard.md by @scalingsynthesis οΈπŸ”— ✍️

Authored by:: [[P- Brendan Langen]]

HyperCard is an example of early [[end-user programming]] in the wild. Released in 1987 by Apple on the Mac, HyperCard included its own [[DSL]] - HyperTalk - that enabled users to create hypermedia systems. HyperTalk was written in a syntax that resembled the English language, which enabled many non-programmers to interact with the cardstack structure expressed by HyperCard.

HyperCard was deprecated in 2004.

The beauty of HyperCard is that it lets people program without having to learn how to write code β€” what I call "programming for the rest of us". HyperCard has made it possible for people to do things they wouldn’t have ever thought of doing in the past without a lot of heavy-duty programming. It’s let a lot of non-programmers, like me, into that loop.

David Lingwood, APDA4

πŸ“„ hypercard.md by @agora@botsin.space

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