Verdix Corporation was an American software company active in the 1980s and 1990s and based in Fairfax County, Virginia, that specialized in language compilers for the Ada programming language.
Company type | public |
---|---|
Industry | software |
Founded | 1982 |
Founder | George Cowan Donn Milton |
Defunct | 1994 |
Fate | acquired by Rational Software |
Successor | Rational Software |
Headquarters | Fairfax County, Virginia |
Verdix was founded in 1982 by George Cowan and Donn Milton. It became a public company in 1983.[1][2] Cohen served as its CEO and chair while Milton managed the company's Ada Products Division.[1][2] Its initial offices were in McLean, Virginia but it subsequently moved to Chantilly and then Herndon, all within Fairfax County in northern Virginia.
The Verdix Ada Development System (VADS)[3] provided a set of tools for software developers who create complex systems. It included an Ada compiler, a visual debugger, a library management system, and an efficient runtime system. VADS was sold in several configurations:[3]
- VADS self: For self-hosted systems running on workstations
- VADScross: For applications embedded in microprocessors
- VADSworks: For networked microprocessor applications providing critical communications and efficiency
- VADSpro: A complete configuration management system integrated with IDE OODSA/Ada, SART (automated reasoning tools), and Interleaf
- VADS APSE: VADSpro plus tools for developing CASE applications
- VSLAN (Verdix Secure Local Area Network): For developers working in highly secure environments
The company achieved its first official validated Ada compiler in January 1985.[4] Verdix became known for the large number of Ada compilers it offered on many different systems, selling both native compilers and cross-compilers for embedded systems architectures. By 1992 Verdix had 105 different Ada compilers on the Ada Joint Program Office validated compilers list, easily the most of any Ada vendor (next highest was Alsys with 60).[5] Its revenues were around $13 million.[6]
The Ada software environment was originally thought to be a promising market, with a number of small, new companies including Verdix seeking to gain a foothold in it.[7] But the Ada compiler business proved to be a difficult one to be in; many of the advantages of the language for general-purpose programming were not seen as such by the general software engineering community or by educators.[8] Consolidations happened within the Ada software tools industry. In 1991 Verix bought Meridian Software Systems, another Ada compiler company.[6] In 1994, Verdix itself was acquired by Rational Software.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c "Socrates Technologies Corporation Announces Appointment of New Directors" (Press release). PRNewswire. December 14, 1998.
- ^ a b "March Chantilly Luncheon – Donn Milton – 'Practical EVM with CMMI-Compliant Processes'". PMI Washington. March 12, 2009.
- ^ a b Luftus, Christopher (1993). Ada Yearbook 1993. IOS Press. pp. 174–175. ISBN 9789051991246.
- ^ "DOD backs Ada compiler from Verdix". Computerworld. January 14, 1985. p. 50.
- ^ "Ada Validated Compilers List". Ada Information Clearinghouse. July 1, 1992. pp. 27–36.
- ^ a b Takahashi, Dean (November 27, 1991). "Eastern Firm to Buy Meridian Software Systems : Computers: Verdix Corp. of Virginia plans to acquire the Irvine company in a stock swap worth about $6 million". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Small Firms Capitalize on Pentagon Software". Los Angeles Times. Reuters. November 25, 1985.
- ^ Rosen, Jean-Pierre (September 2009). "The Ada paradox(es)". ACM SIGAda Ada Letters. 29 (2): 28–35. doi:10.1145/1620593.1620597. S2CID 608405.