eberard@ajpo.sei.cmu.edu (Edward Berard) (06/30/88)
I am toying with an idea, and am posting it on the net for some feedback. I am on the executive committee for a large Ada trade show being held in Anaheim, California in mid-October of this year. I am considering a number of types of exhibits. At Mac World EXPOs, there is often a booth sponsored by Apple in which students may exhibit their Macintosh applications. I would like to conduct the same type of an exhibit with Ada applications running on the Macintosh. The rules would be simple: 1. Eligible participants would be college and university students who have created Ada applications on and for the Macintosh. 2. Those applications deemed to be worthwhile would be provided FREE booth space in a large community booth at the above-mentioned Ada trade show. Since space is limited, applications would be considered on a first-come-first-serve basis. 3. The applications would have to be engineered to a large degree using the Ada language. Specifically, while mixed-language applications would be considered, all accepted applications would have to be at least 50% written in Ada. There are currently at least 3 validated Ada compilers for the Macintosh. TeleSoft (based in San Diego) and Alsys (based in Waltham, Mass.) have Ada compilers that run under A/UX on the Mac II. Meridian (based in Laguna Hills, Calif.) has an Ada compiler that runs under MPW on the Plus, SE and II. Let me know what you think (flames and all). -- Ed Berard (301) 695-6960
singer@endor.harvard.edu (Rich Siegel) (07/01/88)
In article <351@ajpo.sei.cmu.edu> eberard@ajpo.sei.cmu.edu (Edward Berard) writes: >I am toying with an idea, and am posting it on the net for some >feedback. Uh-oh.. :-) *FLAME ON* > 1. Eligible participants would be college and university students > who have created Ada applications on and for the Macintosh. And exactly how many college and university students do you know offhand that know Ada, much less write large programs in it? >There are currently at least 3 validated Ada compilers for the >Macintosh. TeleSoft (based in San Diego) and Alsys (based in Waltham, >Mass.) have Ada compilers that run under A/UX on the Mac II. Meridian >(based in Laguna Hills, Calif.) has an Ada compiler that runs under >MPW on the Plus, SE and II. Again, just how many collegesstudents do you think have a Mac II running A/UX? These things cost real money. I do know for a fact that at CMU some students have Mac II's, but they are the exception rather than the rule. (I should know, I used to go there.) And the same basically holds for MPW; most students who program are going to be using Mac 512's, Plus, or possibly SE machines, but MPW is demanding of hardware (and of $) so the choice of software will be a mainstream product like Macintosh Pascal or some similar beast. >Let me know what you think (flames and all). I think it's a pretty impractical idea, myself. > -- Ed Berard *FLAME OFF* Rich Rich Siegel THINK Technologies Rich Siegel Quality Assurance Technician THINK Technologies Division, Symantec Corp. Internet: singer@endor.harvard.edu UUCP: ..harvard!endor!singer Phone: (617) 275-4800 x305