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Valentine's present ideas: Borland IDE

posted Tuesday, 14 February 2006
If you are a real man, buy a bunch of Borland's IDEs and give it to her tonight.  But do it nicely. Surprise her.  She comes back from work, and sees a  little table covered with a white cloth. Put a boring bottle of Champaign and  flowers right on top. After the regular kiss-and-love-you, slowly lift up the table cloth and show her the pile of boxes with the award-winning Borland Developer Studio (Delphi®, C++Builder® and C#Builder®) and JBuilder®.   I promise, after the dinner you'll have the best sex ever.
But in the morning, Borland’s announcement about getting rid of their IDEs  will  live a bitter taste in your mouth.  At least it did in mine. 

For me, Borland was always THE IDE firm. I remember Borland’s Turbo C++ compiler... Back in 1992 I’ve purchased an excellent book by Robert Lafore “Object-Oriented Programming in Turbo C++”. After reading this book and trying the IDE my life was changed.  Borland was always ahead of all in the IDE space.  Then Philip Khan left the company, the company remained afloat, but something has been lost forever.  Now they are getting rid of all IDEs. I’m not a businessman, but something in this announcement is not right. If you do not need a product line, quietly find a buyer and make an announcement afterward. But just standing at the corner and screaming “Buy me, anyone…” sounds so cheap. Remember “Pretty Woman”?  She got lucky. But will Borland find its Richard Gere?   As  they put it in the movie, the last time it happened was the story of cindy-fng-rella. It may happen again… Anyway, I wish Borland the best with their upcoming Eclispe version of JBuilder called Peloton that should be previewed in the next EclipseCon show.

Another one bites the dust.  Who’s left in the Non-free Java IDE Store? Just JetBrains' IDEA and   IBM's RAD. Hang in there, guys…

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1. Robert left...
Wednesday, 15 February 2006 3:18 am

This company did it for me too. Night school at the local CC with Turbo C and an excellent prof were my ticket out of mainframe deadending. Then Delphi came along with a tool to keep me abreast of the OO revolution. Their port of the VCL to C++ supported me thru several years of contracting at a small ISV. But nostalgia aside, somehow they became the the betamax of IDEs against the MS juggernaut, and eventually Visual Studio surpassed them for MS platform development. Bad management? I don't know. They did seem to thrash from one identity to another. But the fact is, MS monopoly power and the network effect also took a toll on this company's fortunes. Will I miss the quality and accessibility of their tools? You bet. But I won't spend much time mourning. I'm too busy learning the Java way with Sun JSE. I don't mind that it's free.