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[return to "HyperCard: What Could Have Been (2002)"]
1. kick+nV3[view] [source] 2020-02-09 06:36:41
>>jacque+(OP)
From all of the interviews I've read of Atkinson, he seems like one of the most humble programmers of all time.

"I have realized over time that I missed the mark with HyperCard," he said from his studio in Menlo Park, California. "I grew up in a box-centric culture at Apple. If I'd grown up in a network-centric culture, like Sun, HyperCard might have been the first Web browser. My blind spot at Apple prevented me from making HyperCard the first Web browser."

"If I thought more globally, I would have envisioned (HyperCard) in that way," he said. "You don't transfer someone's website to your hard drive to look at it. You browse it piecemeal.... It's much more powerful than a stack of cards on your hard drive.

No pussyfooting around it, no "My idea was so much better, it should have taken off," no "It has been demonstrated repeatedly that what has happened was bad," just flat out: "I messed up, and missed the boat."

So much better than almost everyone who also nearly struck the same gold mine as Berners-Lee.

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2. bobbie+LW3[view] [source] 2020-02-09 07:08:15
>>kick+nV3
I got to see Bill Atkinson at a guest lecture for a class I took last year (recording available online [1]), and this is so true.

He talks about General Magic, which shipped basically an early smartphone in 1994:

I co-founded a company called General Magic, we wanted to make personal communicators that would be intimate devices, with you all the time... we wanted to do something smaller that would be in your pocket and with you all the time, and we failed. We really couldn’t - the components were too expensive, there wasn’t a good capacitive touch sensing that you could do gentle swipe...

And the meteoric rise of the Internet drew the attention away from it and all our partners kinda went to work on the Internet. And yeah, they were right to do so.

We were just ahead of our time. I’m pleased to see some of the ideas that we had bore fruit in the long run, and that’s really what I saw, and the first iPhone was hey - somebody’s finally done the personal communicator.

The lecture also has one of my favorite lines from any lecture I've attended: You know, I’m not like advocating that every software designer should go out and take LSD, but it worked for me.

[1] https://scs.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=...

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3. oretoz+MX3[view] [source] 2020-02-09 07:29:31
>>bobbie+LW3
There is documentary called General Magic which used old footage and interviews to describe their rise and fall. In one scene, Bill is said to have written a big chunk (don’t remember exactly what but I was in awe) of it very quickly. I saw it on a plane when browsing through Emirates’ catalogue.
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