What it is
and isn't
BASIC Anywhere Machine is like a computer, but one entirely focused on BASIC programs
BASIC Anywhere Machine is like a "virtual computer" that is all about BASIC programs.
creating, saving, retrieving, executing, editing, exporting programs
In "I Speak BASIC to My Commodore 64", Aubrey Jones writes: A computer program is a set of instructions that specify what the computer must do.
It is intended for ...
BASIC fans who like to tinker with various BASIC implementations
General programmer-hobbyists
TiddlyWiki fans, who might want a little bit of traditional-programming ability to process data stored in a TiddlyWiki
BASIC programmers who want a portable secondary tool to support their primary BASIC-programming tool (maybe one of these)
students of any age to learn fundamental programming concepts and associating "tiddlers" (simple/detailed notes, and/or whatever other TiddlyWiki goodness) to any BASIC program
BASIC is ridiculously easy to learn, and transitioning from BASIC to any other language should be a breeze
anybody who wants to program (and document) anything as part of a mathematics/science/other project (for example: study of mathematics formulas for creating various graphics)
It is not intended for ...
your elite software development team (or even the motliest of crews)
a "Visual Studio" (or anything else) killer