HyperCard's way of doing background was often a problem. You might want to have 
a set of things in the interface appear on every card, but much of the rest of 
the background be different. That meant making a new background for every 
variation, instead of having a "super background" that had most elements, then 
"sub-backgrounds" to show the background elements that were not common to the 
entire stack.

The LiveCode background groups can either act like a single HyperCard 
background, or as a set of overlapping backgrounds. Once you get the hang of 
them they are more flexible than the HyperCard backgrounds.

That aside, there is other "background" things for you to know about:

Mike Markkula, who Steve Wozniak credits as being the person who enabled Apple 
to come into existence, is one of the backers of RunRev. His pockets are 
probably deeper than Steve's. That doesn't mean it's so much money that they 
can make LiveCode be free. But the open source Kickstarter project will take 
them to the place you'd like them to be.

At the time that Steve Jobs said that you can only make iOS apps using Apple's 
Xcode, RunRev tried to sway them by committing solely to iOS, and to not do 
publishing to Android at all. That wasn't enough, Apple still said that you 
can't use Rev to make iOS apps. Fortunately that all changed back later on.

So, I don't think Apple would go for the idea of having a killer development 
tool included with each Mac anymore. Again, with the Kickstarter initiative it 
won't matter, everyone on Mac, Windows , or Linux, will be able to use LiveCode 
for free.
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