- Bob (Savant Carde):
- Blog
- My Idea
- About Me
- Judge's Comments
Round 1


Savant Carde has to possibility to be revolutionary…but the big problem is that the concept isn’t graspable at all yet.
If this makes it past the first round, Bob really needs to make the transition from vague and abstract to clear and concrete for this to have any chance in hell of becoming a winner. And quickly!

It’s been my experience that people prefer rails (grids, tables, outlines) to piles. People (in general) don’t even like drag-and-drop or drag-and-connect — and they don’t like “object-oriented reality” apps since they take too much input.
A great example of the right amount of real-world-ness is Delicious Library — it’s real-world like, with covers of books and DVDs and shelves, but it also keeps things in a clean grid. No piles of things.
This idea reminds me a bit of Spring, which won an innovators award from O’Reilly but ultimately didn’t find the audience it deserved.

After reading the description I still have no idea what this app does, which worries me. The handwaving factor on this one is at, like, 9.6. It’s got some kind of scripting! And stacks! And HTML! And, uh, Web 2.0! Ruby on Snakes!


























I think just about everyone who ever used HyperCard misses it, and if Pile o’ Cards can fill in the hole then that’s a sure hit. Right?
Hey, it might not be flashy or über cool, but I think it would be useful to a large group of people and that counts for a lot. Is this moving the power of creating little applications into the hands of the average user? It could be.