"But is it future-proof?" - It's future-proof in the sense that Win32 exes will continue to run on Windows forever (either directly or through emulation). I've worked in the Atlanta area as a Delphi contractor for the past eleven years, and I've seen all of my employers either mothball their Delphi projects or convert them to C#/DelphiC#/Java. That leads me to believe that the number of copies of Delphi sold compared to 1998 levels is decreasing year by year. At a certain point, the slice of the pie for Embarcadero will be too small to justify continuing the product.
However, if I were a single-person mISV with an idea for a product, and I needed to get that product on the market tomorrow, I would choose Delphi. Unfortunately, as a contractor, I need available jobs, and the pool has shrunk. There are still jobs, but instead of phone calls every week, they're coming every month, and they're coming out of state. So there are still areas where Delphi is perfect, but those areas are shrinking.
