Sorry Richard I am not strictly correct, the concept was around long before Apple.
However Apple is credited with popularlising it.
I know I first leaned of hypercard, hypertalk and hypertext from Apple sources.
Next time I will use the word "legacy".
As for the connection, to http and html, I got that too from the source below.
If you feel strongly enough about it you are able to change the material in the Wikipedia.
Of course I still may have read it incorrectly.
They only require that the material be well researched and the changes made with
professional skill.
You are entitled to question my sources Richard.
By so doing you improve this list
Cheers and rosuccess
Justin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperCard
HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is the primary method used to convey information on the
World Wide Web. The original purpose was to provide a way to publish and receive HTML
pages.
In August 1987, Apple Computer revealed its HyperCard application for its Macintosh line
of computers at the MacWorld convention in Boston. HyperCard was an immediate hit and
helped to popularize the concept of hypertext with the general public (although as Jakob
Nielsen later pointed out, it was technically a hypermedia system because its hyperlinks
originated only from regions on the screen). The first hypertext-specific academic
conference also took place that year.
Legacy
HyperCard is one of the first products that made use of and popularized the hypertext
concept to a large popular base of users.
Jakob Nielsen has pointed out that HyperCard was really only a hypermedia program since
its links started from regions on a card, not text objects; actual HTML-style text
hyperlinks were possible in later versions, but were awkward to implement and seldom
used.
HyperCard saw a loss in popularity with the growth of the World Wide Web, since the Web
could handle and deliver data in much the same way as HyperCard without being limited to
files on your hard disk. Interestingly, HyperCard had a significant impact on the web as
it inspired the creation of both HTTP itself and JavaScript (through its influence on Tim
Berners-Lee's colleague Robert Cailliau).
---- Richard Campbell <eek2121(a)comcast.net> wrote:
FYI, Hypercard and it's programming language have
nothing to do with
HTTP, nor HTML or anything else. It was completely different.
Hypercard 1.0/hypertext was the first language i was really interested
in (I liked Tandy BASIC, however the machine died. I grew up using a
Tandy CoCo 2.)
jwalsh(a)bigpond.net.au wrote:
I don't quite understand what you mean here
Alex:
Jobs' failed OS ???? Sounds interesting
though.
And as for:
QBASIC-level scripting language are the backbone
of
the Internet? Perhaps you might expand on that one??
I was refering to the "HT" in "HTTP"
And "backbone was a poor choice of words.
I'm sure even sure whether the internet has one.
Cheers and rosuccess
Justin
---- Alex Ionescu <ionucu(a)videotron.ca> wrote:
jwalsh(a)bigpond.net.au wrote:
Put them both together you get NeXT, for
Jobs's Apple HyperText and HyperCard
Which today is the backbone of the Internet.
Jobs' failed OS and QBASIC-level scripting language are the backbone of
the Internet?
I thought Al Gore was the man behind it!
Best Regards,
Alex Ionescu
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