> On Nov 19, 2019, at 12:01 AM, hh via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> TMHO there are so few license holders in HTML5 that
> there is nearly no step forward in that field -- sadly
> a downward spiral.
Interesting. And I was waiting for it to be production ready before paying
money for it.
Kee Net
A few words in defence of the LC HTML5 standalone builder.
1. > Pi wrote:
> To answer your subject heading, I did some calculating based on the
> current state of HTML5 deployment and my own experience in doing the
> fixes single-handed for it. I work it out in the region of £15k.
This is of cour
Hi Alain
I truly feel your pain. To answer your subject heading, I did some calculating
based on the current state of HTML5 deployment and my own experience in doing
the fixes single-handed for it. I work it out in the region of £15k. It’s an
effing mess.
Go to quality.livecode.co.uk and searc
LiveCode cannot do anything for you with that.
The security dictator is
1. the OS
2. the browser you use for the standalone.
There are a lot of differences alone by variations of
these two.
Yes, read and write from files is doable, but with the
restrictions given by OS security and Browser secur
Yeah.. I hear you.
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 5:56 PM Alain Vezina via use-livecode <
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> I gave up regular LC to get interested in HTML5 from LiveCode a year ago.
> My intention was to transform my apps to get me out of Apple's tyranny. I
> was first enchan
Alain Vezina wrote:
> I gave up regular LC to get interested in HTML5 from LiveCode a year
> ago. My intention was to transform my apps to get me out of Apple's
> tyranny. I was first enchanted by this product, but I quickly became
> disillusioned when I realized that basic commands and functions