Borland - Products - Old Software, No Longer Actively Sold By Borland

Old Software, No Longer Actively Sold By Borland

Programming tools
  • Borland C++
  • Borland Delphi
  • Brief (text editor)
  • C++Builder
  • C++BuilderX
  • C#Builder
  • CodeWright
  • Entera (Acquired from OEC)
  • IntraBuilder
  • JBuilder
  • Kylix
  • ObjectVision
  • Turbo Assembler
  • Turbo BASIC (now PowerBASIC)
  • Turbo C
  • Turbo C++
  • Turbo Debugger
  • Turbo Delphi
  • Turbo Modula-2
  • Turbo Pascal
  • Turbo Pascal Database Toolbox
  • Turbo Pascal Editor Toolbox
  • Turbo Pascal Graphix Toolbox
  • Turbo Pascal Numerical Methods Toolbox
  • Turbo Pascal Tutor
  • Turbo Profiler
  • Turbo Prolog (now Visual Prolog)
Databases
  • dBase
  • InterBase
  • Borland Paradox
Utilities
  • SideKick
  • SideKick Plus
  • SuperKey
  • Turbo Lightning (TSR spell checker)
Applications
  • Borland Eureka the Solver
  • Borland Reflex
  • Quattro
  • Quattro Pro
  • Sprint
Games
  • Turbo GameWorks (Turbo Pascal Source and Executables for Bridge, Go-Moku, and Chess)
  • Word Wizard (Requires Turbo Lightning)

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Famous quotes containing the words longer, actively, sold and/or borland:

    Old age is always wakeful; as if, the longer linked with life, the less man has to do with aught that looks like death.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)

    Better risk loss of truth than chance of error—that is your faith-vetoer’s exact position. He is actively playing his stake as much as the believer is; he is backing the field against the religious hypothesis, just as the believer is backing the religious hypothesis against the field.
    William James (1842–1910)

    Just because you sold your soul to the devil, that needn’t make you a teetotaler.
    Dan Totheroh (1895–1976)

    Some people are like ants. Give them a warm day and a piece of ground and they start digging. There the similarity ends. Ants keep on digging. Most people don’t. They establish contact with the soil, absorb so much vernal vigor that they can’t stay in one place, and desert the fork or spade to see how the rhubarb is coming and whether the asparagus is yet in sight.
    —Hal Borland (1900–1978)