Well the first thing you have to remember is that in Britain everything computerwise is behind the times. Every year when I go over to visit my parents and so on I am amazed at how retro all
the computer magazines look.

This, of course, is without mentioning the UK government's obsessive need to regulate everything to such an extent that it chokes a lot of initiative. What boggles my mind is how Yes-men like the BBC go on about how fantastic the upcoming broadband internet service is when it is about 25% of the speed of the cheapest internet service here in Bulgaria (the one I use).

Please also remember that in Britain the level of ignorance of any operating system beyond Windows
is far worse than in most other countries . . .

Just to cover myself, I should point out that those statements refer to non-computer specialists.

At the "University" of Abertay, where I got my second Master's degree, my thesis supervisor asked me if I could explain to her what an emulator was (I was learning Visual Basic at home on a Macintosh running system 10.2 running Windows ME inside Virtual PC:a whole groovy game in its own right), as she (supervising me on a programming thesis to produce a proof-of-concept prototype of a cross-platform voice-activated RAD for teachers) did not know what one was. She also asked me how a Macintosh could work without Windows: she held a PhD is computer systems.

About half of the teenagers I teach English to here in Bulgaria have either a computer running dual-boot Win/Lin (which they have set upo themselves), or several machines running a variety of systems: they are just "fooling around" by themselves; but they are well aware of both the variety of OSes and programming environments. Now, as Bulgaria is, after all, a small somewhere at the bottom of the European sack, this should give you a fair idea of what sort of things to expect from kids in other European countries. Presumably one of the reasons for Brexit is so that Britain can blame its on incredible mediocrity (computerwise, at least) on something other than the English tendency to rubbish success and praise second-rate stuff; while the E.U. is already outstripping them
by leaps and bounds.

Richmond.

On 5.10.2016 04:05, Paul Hibbert wrote:
How can a major UK Mac magazine ignore LiveCode in an article titled "Complete 
guide to coding and programming on a Mac: Best programming languages for Mac coders 
| How to get started as an app developer”.

Link: 
http://www.macworld.co.uk/how-to/mac/complete-guide-coding-programming-apps-mac-3645777/

I’ve left a comment on their page, may help with a few more comments.

Paul
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