Last September I wrote about why we still need a HyperCard for the AI era—a tool that’s accessible but controllable, that lets everyday people build and share software without needing to be developers. John Allsopp sees the demand side of that equation already arriving.
Writing on LinkedIn, he starts with his 13-year-old daughter sending him a link to Aippy, a platform where people create, share, and remix apps like TikTok videos. It already has thousands of apps on it:
Millions of people who have never written a line of code are starting to build applications — not scripts or simple automations, but genuine applications with interfaces and logic and persistence.
The shift Allsopp describes isn’t just about who’s building. It’s about how software spreads:
This pattern — creation, casual sharing, organic spread — looks a lot more like how content moves on TikTok or Instagram than how apps move through the App Store. Software becomes something you make and share, and remix. Not something you publish and sell. It surfaces through social connections and social discovery, not through store listings and search rankings.
And the platforms we have aren’t built for it. Allsopp points out that the appliance model Apple introduced in 2007 made sense for an audience that was intimidated by technology. That audience grew up:
The platforms designed to protect users from complexity are now protecting users from their own creativity and that of their peers.
This is the world I was writing about in “Why We Still Need a HyperCard for the AI Era.” I argued for tools with direct manipulation, technical abstraction, and local distribution—ingredients HyperCard had that current AI coding tools still miss. Allsopp is describing the audience those tools need to serve. The gap between the two is where the opportunity sits.

Here Comes Everybody (Again)
Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody (2008) was about the democratisation of coordination…what happens when everybody builds. Shirky’s vision of a world where “people are given the tools to do things together, without needing traditional organizational structures” didn’t pan out quite as optimisticall























