Borland and Macromedia are making commercial tools for the open source Eclipse IDE. Macromedia plans to join the Eclipse Foundation
on Monday, unveiling a plug-in planned for Eclipse. Borland already unveiled an incarnation of JBuilder last week, code-named
Peloton and engineered specifically for Eclipse.
Flex applications run in Macromedia’s popular Flash Player. Macromedia intends the commercial plug-in to link the Macromedia
Flex presentation server, designed for rich Internet applications, to Eclipse. The company’s Flex Builder IDE, in turn, will
be discontinued after the expected 2006 debut of the plug-in, code-named “Zorn.” A companion product featuring the Eclipse
IDE and the plug-in also is planned. Macromedia is vowing a smooth transition for Flex Builder users.
Released in March 2004, Flex has garnered 300 customers. But the company recognizes the momentum of Eclipse.
“I think the biggest thing this will do for us is accelerate our adoption within existing customers because many of these
customers have standardized on Eclipse as their IDE,” said Jeff Whatcott, vice president of product management at Macromedia.
“What makes [the Eclipse plug-in] compelling is that Macromedia is now targeting the mainstream developer audience for their
rich user interface apps, whereas before they targeted a more specialized designer audience,” said Ronald Schmelzer, senior
analyst at ZapThink.
A Flex user expressed surprise when informed that Eclipse would supplant Flex Builder.
“That’s interesting,” said Kendall Whitehouse, senior director of information technology at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania. But he expressed an openness to consider the Eclipse variation.
“[Flex is] appealing because of the kind of applications that you can build with it. The more they can make the development
process easier, quicker, that’s all to the good,” Whitehouse said.
The university uses Flex to develop an online classroom-seating chart with a drag-and-drop metaphor.
Macromedia will join Eclipse as an “Add-in Provider” member, which is a midlevel status within the organization. The company
will contribute code such as bug fixes back to Eclipse.
The Eclipse organization gains another high-profile member in Macromedia. BEA Systems announced its allegiance to Eclipse
in February. Other vendors participating include Borland, Eclipse-founder IBM, Oracle, and SAP. Microsoft and Sun Microsystems
remain perhaps the only holdouts among major software companies.
Macromedia’s Eclipse participation was not driven by the pending acquisition by Adobe, Whatcott said. The $3.4 billion acquisition
is expected to close this fall.
With its decision to base Flex on the Eclipse IDE, Macromedia joins other vendors such as BEA and Borland that have begun
to standardize on it.
“Eclipse is rapidly becoming the IDE of choice, especially in non-Microsoft environments, since it provides a standard way
for developers to interact with a whole set of different development environments,” Schmelzer said. “In general, the proprietary
IDE seems to be going by the wayside, especially in the development of heterogeneous applications.”
Borland, for its part, announced Peloton last week, a commercial version of JBuilder created specifically for the open source
Eclipse platform.
“Our strategic road map is to standardize on Eclipse,” said Rob Cheng, director of product marketing at Borland. “Eclipse
is the underlying plumbing for our products.”
Cheng emphasized that JBuilder will not be open sourced but will “continue to be a commercial product.” Peloton, he added,
is slated to be available in the first half of next year.
Offering only scant detail, Borland also said the forthcoming JBuilder 2006, due later this year, will include collaboration
features such as shared code editor views and joint debugging. Cheng declined to commit to a shipping date for JBuilder 2006,
but only said, “It will be earlier than December.”