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Delphi is currently ranked as the 10th most popular language (Dec 2008) and has approximately 1.75 million users worldwide.

So why were there so few people at the CodeRage III virtual conference put on last week by Embardero?

I really enjoyed the sessions I was at, but many were attended by fewer than 100 people. Even Marco Cantu's talks only had about 220 attendees.

I was personally very disappointed by the attendance, which I thought should have been in the thousands.

Why weren't you there?

What should the organizers do to get you there next year?

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Perhaps it's because Delphi is NOT the 8th most popular language! It's all statistics, and using Stackoverflow, I make it 11th most popular with a measly 1.8%. Don't get me wrong, I'm a Delphi developer, and would love Delphi to be up in the top 3, with conferences like Coderage having 1000s of attendees, but right now, that isn't the case.

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Why wasn't I at what?

I'm a student, and would be interested in any sort of new programming environment or language features, but Code Rage three? Is that a game?

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Several reasons, in no special order:

  • I'd heard about CodeRage, but didn't hear it was a virtual conference. When you're in Europe, you're well used to the fact that most conferences and informal usergroup meetings happen in the US - or, if you're really lucky, somewhere else in Europe. In practice, this means that when I hear about a Delphi conference, I tune it out.

  • What proportion of Delphi users are in Europe? Without having hard numbers, you can be sure it's pretty high - consider how many popular 3rd-party component vendors are European. But I understand the sessions were scheduled for US timezones, effectively shutting out European and Asian participants.

  • Held too soon after product release? Delphi 2009 has been out for a couple of months, barely, so the penetration of the new release is probably relatively small.

  • Sour grapes syndrome? As Borland before, now CodeGear goes to great lengths to make sure as few people buy Delphi as possible - not just by setting an uncompetitve price, but primarily by forcing non-US customers to buy from local resellers, who charge huge premiums for no added value. I'm only a hobbyist, but I would have paid Borland's price for the Professional version, if I could buy it online. I will never make a free gift of two or three hundred Euro to the local reseller though - who has a practical monopoly on the market, since no reseller is allowed to ship abroad. (To add insult to injury, the reseller doesn't even take online orders: you are supposed to fax your order form to them - chew on that for a while...) So I will wait instead until I can buy a shrink-wrapped copy for a fair price on eBay, as I did with Delphi 2007, or ask a friend traveling to the US to pick one for me.

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For the record -- we started the sessions at 0600 in the morning so that folks in Europe could see them live. – Nick Hodges Dec 7 '08 at 5:17
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I attended only one session (on product quality), but that is because I am not interested in Delphi. We have used C++Builder for many years, and there were a total of two or three sessions (including the quality one) that touched C++Builder.

If there were more sessions on C++Builder topics, I would have certainly participated more heavily.

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