I was a frequent member of the Borland Conference (BorCon) advisory board, and that exposed me to Delphi early in its development stage. At the time I was an associate editor and columnist for Paradox Informant Magazine, and Delphi sounded like it was going to be the compiler that we Paradox developers had been waiting for.
And it was. As my longtime friend Ann Lynnworth predicted, Delphi reduced Paradox to a mere file format. It was clear to me that Delphi was going to be a really big deal. As a result, in the pre-release times I took two steps to join the Delphi community as a charter member. I committed to Informant Group publisher Mitch Koulouris to write a monthly column for his new Delphi Informant Magazine. My column, called DBNavigator (after the Delphi component), focused primarily on database development and related issues. In that first issue I described using the Borland Database Engine from within Delphi to work with Paradox and Dbase tables. That was the first of 42 consecutive issues in which my column appeared, though I continued to be a regular contributor for the remaining years of publication.
The front cover of the premiere issue of Delphi Informant Magazine, published in May of 1995
My second commitment was to Softbite International president Kevin Smith, to write and present a two-day Delphi course if he would take it out on tour. I had been working with Softbite for some years, and was a presenter on the Paradox 5 for Windows World Tour, and wrote the material for, and presented, on the Paradox 7 for Windows World Tour. He agreed, and this new 24 city tour was known as the Delphi World Tour. It began in Columbus, Ohio on July 6th of 1995. I taught that first stop, as well as about 12 others. I believe there were two other presenters, one of them being the venerable Bill Todd. If there was another, I can’t remember who it was. They (or he) covered the remaining cities.
An ad for the original Delphi World Tour appearing in the July 1995 issue of Delphi Informant
Despite my principal work being as a Delphi developer, I continued to write and present the Delphi World Tours (the final being the Delphi 5 World Tour), and followed that with Delphi Development Seminars in conjunction with Informant Communication Group (one year only), several years of the Borland Developer Days (Europe, in conjunction with Desktop Associates), and then Delphi Developer Days, which I started with my wife, Loy Anderson. Delphi Developer Days ran from 2001 (where the first stop on the tour, Arlington, Virginia, had to be cancelled after the 9/11 attacks due to the closing of Metro underground that ran past the Pentagon and the number of government attendees, whose priorities changed after that awful event) and continued through 2017.
We expanded Delphi Developer Days in 2009 by added a second presenter, which gave me the opportunity to work with four of the top Delphi professionals, all Spirit of Delphi recipients: Marco Cantú, Bob Swart, Ray Konopka, and Nick Hodges. Thanks, guys. It was a great pleasure.
During the past 25 years I have written about and/or trained developers on every version of Delphi (including the notorious .NET only Delphi 8), and as you might imagine, I have acquired a museum-like collection of software. One of my favorites, shown here, is my original, shrink-wrapped copy of Delphi Client/Server.
A shrink-wrapped copy of the original Delphi Client/Server
But a particular observation comes to mind. To quote the immortal Grateful Dead, and in respect for David Intersimone’s penchant for wearing tie-dye t-shirts, I have to say “What a long strange trip it’s been.”
Let me conclude with an observation and a positive thought. Delphi is still going strong, and the latest version, Delphi Rio 10.3.3, is the best yet. So, Cheers! Here’s to the next 25 years.
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