So maybe we should gather up our thoughts and state what we'd expect from a tool such as Revolution (I wonder how they're getting on at the improve Revolution mailing list...).

Apologies if my thought seem a little disjointed, been up all night messing about with audio (ouch!).

Cheers,

Luis.

I, for one, am grateful that Revolution even exists. I started with Hypercard, which died a long, lingering death. We waited, and waited, and waited for Apple to update it. There were rumors. So many rumors. And finally we all had to accept that Apple had genuinely abandoned it. And panic ensued.

If it had not been for Metacard, I don't know what choices we would have had. I do not know C, or Pascal, or any of the traditional languages. I learned to program by trial and error in Hypercard. And the help of some awesome books, particularly Hypertalk 2.2 co-authored by our very own Jeanne DeVoto. I've never seen a better programming reference. Good job, Jeanne!

So Hypercard was dead, and Metacard hadn't quite popped into the realm visibly yet.

I went out and bought $500 worth of C books, assuming I would have to learn to program all over again. The language in C is so radically different, I might as well not know anything.

Then Metacard appeared to save the day. And they literally did save the day. They were what Hypercard would be if it had been regularly updated and maintained. And I never cracked the spiffy new C books except to look up a few oddball things on methodology.

Revolution existed as an IDE, if I remember correctly. You could buy Revolution, or you could buy Metacard. The engine was the same, the IDE was different. And Revolution had some agreement with Metacard to license the engine, or something like that. (Please pardon any errors.)

Then the two merged, or Revolution bought out Metacard, or something to that effect. I'm not very clear on the combining of the two. Except to know that the engine is the same and the language is the same, and it looks like it's going to be around for a very long time.

I am grateful to feel confident that my beloved programming tool is still in existance, and expecting to remain so for a long time to come. I have no doubt that it is a very frustrating thing to update and maintain a tool such as this. And Kevin probably hears a lot more griping than he does thank you's.

The ending could have been much different, had Scott Raney not created Metacard, and had Kevin Miller not carried the torch further.

So to Scott and Kevin, THANK YOU. Consider any future gripes minor to the THANK YOU for providing this tool.

As for desired features, give me a few months and I'm sure I will find several :-D

Shari
--
Gypsy King Software
Mac and Windows shareware games
http://www.gypsyware.com
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