Thank you
Richard!!! It's good to see you again...so long!
Thanks to you too,
Stam, for trying to make me understand some things that, however, I don't quite understand... since, when there's a change like that in company policy, there should always be certainties, not "fuzzy logic" certainties (a little black, a little white) , even if it's a tech company!
And of course thanks to you
Heather, you're very kind for taking my story to heart, which is admittedly a bit heartbreaking. I also thank you for the compliments. But I am only doing my small part for a sweeter world

.
However, I didn't want to stir up emotion, nor did I want to wring advantageous conditions from you

.
Like me there are thousands of Mariasole in the world, orphaned of their teaching tool (and personal intellectual growth, of course), which was LiveCode Community.
In fact, I certainly cared about the kids in my neighborhood, my LC students (at least I can teach the kids LC!, after all the hours I spent on it!)... I cared, however, about all the young students in the world!
Because LC is something worldwide, even if maybe LiveCode Ltd itself doesn't realize it. It is a phenomenon that has entered people's lives.
So I would like to make an appeal to the new course of LiveCode Ltd.
I imagine that for
Kevin Miller, first, the choice to abandon a community and the open source version was something very difficult and even embarrassing

. This discomfort has been noticed in the quality of communication that, I must say, has not been up to the lucidity shown when looking for money on Kikstarter.
I read that even in this forum an entire thread has been deleted, I imagine that many people, instead of feeling deeply disappointed and bitter like me

, have instead become angry

!
I think this reaction is due to the fact that
we love you Kevin, we really love all of you at LiveCode Ltd, 
all the collaborators, engineers, participants, because we feel LC is ours too, just like the old Apple users felt the company as their own. There is attachment, there is affection, that's why for example I feel sad and others feel betrayed.
But I don't agree with "betrayal". In my positive view of people and life, it doesn't mean that
Kevin Miller, even with a closed system and his new "four plans", can't still do something
free and nice, moreover very beneficial for those who might become customers in the near future.
The board of directors would totally agree with me.
So I turn to you, dear Kevin, as a brother and a friend, I want to write to you, on behalf of myself and other teachers I know personally who teach at LC school, and who have been following your adventure for decades.
Willing or unwilling dear Kevin you have to recognize at least three things (plus one):
(a) after a good 8 years of the "free" version of LC you have created
an LC generation of students and teachers!
(b) thousands of teachers and schools all over the world use LC to bring kids that "were born artists and not engineers" (to quote Steve Jobs) in the world of computers and internet where they would have never moved a step as programmers. Thanks to LC they are actors, not passive spectators.
They program robots, they didn't become robots.
(c) without free Hypercard on your Mac, without anyone having made it available to you as a kid you would not be what you are (
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8RD4SVOyVs).
I'm looking at some possible Kevin Miller(s) who are dreaming with your code, can I change their destiny?

Can you change their destiny?

Are you up for a bad trip version of "Back to the Future"?
(d) without the Community Edition, I wouldn't be writing to you and I wouldn't be able to teach the neighborhood kids, terrified of the Covid "new normal",
that computers aren't just something to check QR codes and track our lives, they're for so much more, first and foremost to collaborate and love each other
You need to know Kevin that the vast majority of these teachers and kids and schools (here, for example, since there is no funding, at school they are forced to bring their own toilet paper and soap from home, no joke

),
just don't have the money to pay for the "student plan", and so they risk seeing their computer training cancelled (since computer training came about because there was a program, called LiveCode Community Edition that even the old school director understood - and understood the strategic aspect of it for the students -).
Now, you can't say, hey, that's not my problem!
No, it's your problem, you're the one who created all this joy, 
these expectations, these little Kevin(s) who are only wrong for having believed in Community!
Remember "Six Reasons Why Computer Science Education is Failing Students?" [
https://bit.ly/3FQaJoF]
Well with LC Community you changed things. Now you want to throw it all away? Or more specifically, do you want to throw away the majority of kids that in this world crisis have probably lost a big piece of their future?
For all this I would like to propose, in the fullness of your new strategy, to launch a
LiveCode Miller plan.
That is a very simple and basic version of LC, with the commands (that you, Kevin, consider didactically appropriate, perhaps asking advice from teachers around the world) that are essential to learn programming with LiveCode.
A version with which, for free, teachers and students can play and learn at school and at home without having to choose between paying for a internet subscription or a soap/toilet paper dose.
A version with which they can be grateful to you and can, once they get a little richer, have found a job opportunity because of the experience you provided them for free (i.e. you invested in them).
So then they will happily and gratefully pay you the "standard plan". Remember the happiness of your first paycheck?
I repeat, the
LiveCode Miller plan will only be made of the didactically relevant "essential parts" of LC just to understand the language, to do simple (but didactically outstanding) things.
It only works if users are registered, and that way, if they want to switch to the "student plan" they might even get a small discount or something for free.
No open source, no full program, just a coconut instead of a coconut tree
. But to make a tree you need a seed. The seed of culture and teaching.
That's what I feel from my heart to say to you Kevin, and to all of you LC bosses and investors.
It's true that for now one can adjust with LC Community, but I assure you that no teacher will embark on an installation of a program they can't even find officially on the manufacturer's site anymore. It's obvious.
Kevin, think about it. You could also create a
Miller Foundation 
and seek donations, including institutional donations. It's easy to fund something like this.
Why lose all these teachers and students who don't have money or who only have the money to buy one license per class?
Please still give us the chance to teach and learn this wonderful heir language of an era that must not die out!
You know I could have easily written to Heather and taken my free licenses for my neighborhood kids

.
But inside me, as I'm sure inside you, still lives a child who does things because they are right and beautiful.
We don't want favors or handouts, we just want to help you Kevin, we are part of your family too.
Listen to this humble advice from a humble county teacher.
Thanks for your patience guys
Love to all
(='.'=)
Mariasole