did they actually licenced JBuilder . . . or did Inprise just offer?

Carl

-----Original Message-----
From: Sze Yuen Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Helge Hielscher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wednesday, December 09, 1998 11:34 PM
Subject: Re: what tools do you use for programming


>
>Well, Visual Cafe and JBuilder are very close to 
>eash other. I really couldn't find any main feature
>that is missing from the other one.
>
>For the versions, what you get from the $99 are
>a plain IDE, then you add money for DB, network
>programming (team-development) and CORBA support.
>Again, even the price and versions match up between
>the two.
>
>I go with JBuilder for two reasons:
>1. JBuilder supports CORBA right now, Visual Cafe
>   until first quater 1999.
>2. Microsoft licenced JBuilder. (Potentially
>   replace J++?)
>
>Sze Yuen Wong
>
>
>
>---Helge Hielscher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Sze Yuen Wong,
>> 
>> 
>> > For Windows, you have a lot more choice, I think
>> > Jbuilder and Visual Cafe are the two biggest. At
>> > least that's what I thought after evaluating 7
>> > window IDEs. Either one will give you a solid
>> > environment.
>> >
>> > Feel free to drop me a line for more info.
>> 
>> what are the differences: conceptual or only in the look&feel?
>> what features do the professional versions have, that the normal
>ones lack?
>> 
>> Thanks again for your answers,
>> Helge
>> 
>> 
>
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