Today the news of the purchase of CodeGear by Embarcadero Technologies transpired. I am wondering what this brings us (the developers), given the interesting past of Borland.
First it was “Borland” with products like “Borland Pascal” (and “Turbo Pascal”) and at the end of the 1990s it called itself suddenly “Inprise” and we could buy “Inprise Delphi” … wow. After a short interlude under this changed name, we landed back at “Borland” until the point when they “forked” and created a subsidiary responsible for the developer tools, called “CodeGear” and fully owned by them, after failing to sell the branch. Now Embarcadero Technologies was obviously willing to purchase this subsidiary and this will in my opinion be a defining moment for Delphi and C++ Builder.
It felt a bit like these tools all landed in an orphanage called “CodeGear”, rather than a subsidiary fully committed to the development of these formerly great products. I have bought BDS 2006 (which includes Delphi 2006 and C++ Builder 2006) in May 2006 and was very much disappointed. The product is creeping slow. I cannot override any of the prerequisites when installing it and I am even forced to install the .NET SDK 1.x, although I am not at all interested in any of the .NET “personalities” offered by BDS 2006. Hint, Visual Studio 2003 offers the ability to override the prerequisite requirements for those who are anyway not interested in the parts of the product suite that require those.
Now that they have released BDS 2007, and the future version – codenamed Tiburon – is on the doorstep, I have lost all my trust in that company and find the upgrade prices from the failed product BDS 2006 to the newer versions is ridiculous, given that I might just get another failed product. Borland/Inprise/Borland/CodeGear isn’t known to provide trial versions that allow you to actually try all aspects of their products. For example the command line compiler is known to be missing or crippled. So what am I supposed to do? Believe some of the pro-Delphi zealots once again to get disappointed once again?
Waiting for input …,
// Oliver
PS: I’ll certainly observe the developments in these products, but it’s getting a bit more scary at the moment, rather than exciting or at least reassuring.
Update: looking at this, “Commodore” seems to be the one I am waiting for, not Tiburon.
this sounds good, but let’s see.