Who owns delphi




















This means that Embarcadero doesn't see this project as a threat, but rather as a partner. I started programming with delphi and interbase back in Delphi was the best programming tool. Until Delphi 7, the IDE was perfect. But when Delhpi 8 was released it changed a lot. They made everything different, the entire UI was modified and it was suppose to be the. So basicly thats when the declined started. Deciding between my delhi 7 and any new version of Borland Delphi, I stick with Delphi 7.

So not only for me but for a lot of other programmers that I know that worked with Delphi share this same point of view. Also delphi 7 was very easy to crack. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.

Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. What happened to Borland Delphi? Asked 10 years, 4 months ago. Active 8 years, 8 months ago. Viewed 83k times. One thing to realize: As you say, it's very pleasant and intuitive to work with, and you're not the only one who's noticed that. Some companies, in fact, consider the productivity that Delphi brings to be a true competitive advantage. They make sure to keep very quiet about using Delphi so their competition doesn't catch on.

So what you end up with is a pretty widely-used language that doesn't have a very high profile. Borland is dead, Delphi is not. Jeff told me that Philippe Kahn created the Frank Borland personna as a marketing gimmick. Funnily enough I always assumed somebody created Philippe Kahn as a marketing gimmick! Mason, as wierd as that sounds, its true. A company I worked for did exactly that because it allowed them to compete against larger competitors who used C.

If someone asked, sure, we'd tell them. But we didnt go out of our way to advertise what we used. Active Oldest Votes. Delphi is still around and very much alive, but under new ownership. I've never understood why they didn't offer a version for non-commercial apps really cheap, just to attract more users. It all started when Borland changed its name to Inprise , and then back.

Or perhaps before, when Philippe Kahn left the company. Any way, Borland was founded and lived strong as a company serving software developers, and at one point it decided to shift its attention to corporate mumbo-jumbo. That's when many, like me, felt betrayed, and dangerously trapped in a proprietary technology. Then came Java I still use Delphi 7 on legacy work.

And I live in former eastern european country. Gerry, the original Turbo Pascal price was in a world of expensive software. Today both the Java and the. NET world has excellent starter versions for free. Borland had a sizable offering of languages, tools and applications, but Pascal was their main meal ticket. The problem is that they put all their eggs in the Windows basket when they could have branched out to the Macintosh market.

It may have been much smaller, but they could have owned the cross platform development strategy. The fact that Mac development was still done in Pascal made it a no brainer. Had they played their cards right, Java would have been a non-starter. Sorry, but Java has nothing on Object Pascal. Show 10 more comments. Interesting, I have only been working with it for a couple of days and haven't run into any problems yet. I guess price is indeed a good reason to not use Delphi. Lucas: I'm glad to hear that, but a bit surprised.

I found D and D so buggy as to be practically unusable, to be honest. The version before D, which practically no one even bought and those who did almost universally hated it , Borland had rewritten the IDE from scratch and it took another three releases before the quality reached a tolerable level, due mostly to development resource starvation because of the company's vision problems, as I outlined in my reply.

I don't think you have the data to say "Delphi usage is definitely declining. There are also some very significant improvements in recent versions, and even more exciting things come in new releases. I don't work there any more, so don't call me a shill for the company ; — John Kaster. John you are right, I don't have the exact data, but basing on a fact that many 3rd party vendors died or jumped in the.

NET vagon and it's getting harder to find new Delphi developers, specially young people. Every year our Croatian user group went smaler etc. All that combined and I think that I can say that Delphi usage ecosystem is slowly declining from times of Delphi 7, btw.

I really love Delphi and was activly use it for 15 years — Antonio Bakula. I used D for several years and found it tolerable - as long as I turned error insight off. As a brand of BorgWarner, Delphi Technologies Aftermarket will maintain its brand identity, and customers across the world will be able to rely on their trusted contacts for sales and customer service support. In connection with the close of this transaction, Delphi Technologies common stock will cease to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

At a. Delphi Technologies brings industry leading power electronics technology and talent, with an established production, supply and customer base. Tony Styllis starts working full-time with his father in their family fruit and veg store in Goodge Street at the age of 14, the store specialised in bringing speciality produce from Greece and Cyprus.

Tony Styllis also helps to run the family farm in West Drayton near Heathrow at the time where they become amongst the first people to start commercially growing parsley and coriander in the UK. The first major client landed is Harrods. The second official production unit is rented out in Islington, North London, over the years several units are rented out until we get our 5th unit at the site in Our family at Delphi is at the heart of everything we do.



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