Boeing Selects Aonix ObjectAda for Tomahawk Cruise Missile Mission Planning Software; Product maturity, vendor responsiveness, and new capabilities cited as key selection criteria.SAN DIEGO San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , Calif. -- Aonix(R), a provider of complete solutions for safety- and mission-critical applications, announced that Boeing has chosen and licensed ObjectAda for Windows. Boeing plans to use Aonix's ObjectAda for Windows for ongoing software development and for migration tasks on the Tomahawk tomahawk [from an Algonquian dialect of Virginia], hatchet generally used by Native North Americans as a hand weapon and as a missile. The earliest tomahawks were made of stone, with one edge or two edges sharpened (sometimes the stone was globe shaped). Mission Planning (TMP TMP (thymidine monophosphate): see thymine. ) Software Platform. Boeing's interest in Aonix's ObjectAda for Windows hinges on several technical factors, including its full compatibility with Microsoft's .NET platform. Facing legacy obsolescence ob·so·les·cent adj. 1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete. 2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed. and diminishing support for their existing Ada development environment, Boeing's TMP group initiated a full-scale evaluation of available Ada compiler and tool solutions. Their challenge was to find an Ada vendor with compiler technology able to support a very large Ada source code base, meet stringent performance and functionality requirements, and efficiently support a large software development team. In order to port a large code base without requiring a large investment of new engineering resources, Boeing's TMP group needed a multilanguage development environment to accommodate existing C, Fortran, and .NET software assets. "Aonix rose to all the challenges we laid out," noted Dan Turpin Dan "Terrible" Turpin is a fictional character from DC Comics. He is a police inspector in Metropolis. He was created by Jack Kirby and first appeared in New Gods #5 in 1971, when he was encountered by Orion. , TMP Systems Engineer. "They accommodated specific requirements critical to our success, such as performing specific debugger Software that helps a programmer debug a program by stopping at certain breakpoints and displaying various programming elements. The programmer can step through source code statements one at a time while the corresponding machine instructions are being executed. and compiler performance improvements that we needed." Similarly, Ben Ralston, TMP's compiler technical evaluator, stated, "As an engineer, I realize it was no small feat to accomplish technical changes of this magnitude to their compiler, especially in such a short time frame. Aonix met all of our objectives." The Aonix ObjectAda for Windows brings the improvements of ObjectAda 8.2 to the Windows development platform. In integrating current Windows improvements with the Aonix Ada 95 compiler, Aonix has delivered enhancements to the object code and symbolic debugging (programming) debugging - The process of attempting to determine the cause of the symptoms of malfunctions in a program or other system. These symptoms may be detected during testing or use by real users. information generation and provided full compatibility with the Microsoft Visual Studio Microsoft Visual Studio is Microsoft's flagship software development product for computer programmers. It centers on an integrated development environment which lets programmers create standalone applications, web sites, web applications, and web services that run on any platforms .NET 2003 development tools. Recognizing the growing number of large-scale Ada projects, ObjectAda 8.2 for Windows offers dramatic performance improvements for developers linking executable files or initiating debugging sessions for large programs. ObjectAda for Windows 8.2 includes the comprehensive Ada libraries needed for calling Windows Win32 and the Visual C++ .NET 2003 MFC (Microsoft Foundation Class) An application framework for writing Microsoft C/C++ and Visual C++ applications. See application framework. MFC - Microsoft Foundation Class interfaces from application source code written in Ada. In ObjectAda for Windows, these Ada binding libraries are fully compatible with the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003 tools and libraries. As part of the ObjectAda 8.2 family, ObjectAda for Windows allows developers to choose between the traditional Aonix IDE for development and the new AonixADT(TM) Eclipse plug-in. AonixADT incorporates Ada-project awareness, an Ada-language sensitive editor, Ada-language compile and build capabilities, and a complete Ada debugger interface, enabling Ada developers to enjoy state-of-the-art interface capabilities geared to maximize developer ease and efficiency. Shipping and Availability ObjectAda for Windows is available immediately for Windows 2000 and XP platforms, with packages starting at $1495. For more information about ObjectAda 8.2 for Windows, please visit: www.aonix.com/objectada.html. About Aonix(R) Aonix offers mission- and safety-critical solutions primarily to the military and aerospace, telecommunications and transportation industries. Aonix delivers the leading high-reliability, real-time embedded Inserted into. See embedded system. virtual machine solution for running Java(TM) programs deployed today and has the largest number of certified Ada applications at the highest level of criticality. Headquartered in San Diego, CA and Paris, France, Aonix operates sales offices throughout North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. and Europe in addition to offering a network of international distributors. For more information, visit www.aonix.com. Aonix and ObjectAda are registered trademarks of Aonix. All other tradenames and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. (C) 2006, Aonix, all rights reserved. |
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