.NET News Desk
CodeGear Software Development Tools To Be Installed on up to 1 Million PC's in Russian School System
Russian Federal Agency of Education Standardizes on CodeGear
Feb. 1, 2008 08:00 AM
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CodeGear announced the sale of
a 1 million seat license deal to the Russian Federal Agency of Education for
teaching programming and application development to Russian students.
CodeGear’s products -- Delphi, Delphi for .NET, and C++
Builder- will be available for use in all of Russia's primary and secondary
schools to teach its new generation of computer programmers.
The sale, one of CodeGear’s largest in EMEA, is part of a sweeping $100 million Russian federal
initiative called the National State Project of High-Grade Education. By
licensing the software packages in school settings and standardizing what
products are used, the government hopes to increase the quality of
education across Russia
by providing teachers and students with access to the best information
technologies available.
Delphi, Delphi
for .NET, and C++Builder provide students and teachers all the tools they need
to quickly and easily create rich database driven applications for Microsoft Windows and the Web. Many high-performance engineering and
scientific applications as well as leading Web-based applications, Internet
messaging programs, computer games and utilities around the world have been
developed using Delphi and C++Builder.
“The decision to include CodeGear came after extensive research
into Russia’s educational
system,” said Felix Muchnik, general director of Softkey, one of Russia’s leading
software resellers. “The power and ease-of-use of Delphi
makes it ideal for developers of all levels. Government reports indicate that
Delphi and Pascal are among the most widely used programming languages in the
country and use of CodeGear tools is so prolific that more than 6000 different
titles devoted to CodeGear and Borland products have been published for the
Russian market.”
“Russia has a
long history of students programming in Delphi
and Pascal,” said CodeGear CEO, Jim Douglas. “Developers around the globe even
called Delphi the ‘easiest to use’ IDE in Evans
Data Corporation’s 2007 Developer Choice IDE user survey. It’s exciting to see
this trend continue with a new generation of developers as these students go on
to develop next generation applications for some of the world’s most
progressive industries.”
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