12/13/2025 at 3:18:23 AM
Author here. Thanks for sharing this with the HN community. For those wondering if this is worth reading, I've written a click-baity title to entice you, "HyperCard vs. Vibe Coding" (though it's only one very small part of the article, it is discussed)by ChristopherDrum
12/13/2025 at 5:04:42 PM
Glad to see you're aware of Decker. It addresses a number of the shortcomings of HyperCard that you specifically call out: basic sound editing and recording are built in and can be wired up without custom scripting, "Decks" are portable, and can be saved as standalone self-contained .html files, the script editor has mildly more powerful editing features like block indenting and a REPL, color is paletted, but a first-class feature, and fields can contain true hyperlinks (whose behavior can be freely overridden with scripts).There's also quite a bit of novel functionality, like easy mechanisms for defining new brushes, new transitional visual effects, and even custom "widgets". Decker has grids and a SQL-like query language for working with bulk data, and a growing ecosystem of libraries and tools. Development is ongoing! The scripting language, Lil, is deliberately unlike HyperTalk, but tries to thread the needle between offering accessibility to beginners and power tools to experts. (It's secretly in the APL family.)
If you give it a chance, I hope you'll find that Decker is much more than a superficial imitation of HyperCard's look and feel.
by RodgerTheGreat