I-Logix

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I-Logix Inc.
Industry Software
Fate Acquired by Telelogic
Founded 1987
Founder(s) David Harel, Amir Pnueli
Defunct 2006
Headquarters Andover, MA, United States
Rehovot, Israel
Products Model driven development solutions
Operating income $26.5 (2005)
Net income $2.9 (2005)
Employees 133 (2005)
Parent IBM

I-Logix was a leading provider of Collaborative Model driven development (MDD) solutions for systems design through software development focused on real-time embedded applications. Founded in 1987, the Andover, Massachusetts-based company product line enhanced collaboration among engineers, graphically modeling the requirements, behavior, and functionality of embedded systems. In addition, I-Logix was a member of the UML Partners, a group devoted to the development of the Unified Modeling Language (UML).

History

I-Logix was originally founded in Israel as AdCad Ltd. in April 1984 by David Harel, Amir Pnueli and brothers Ido and Hagi Lachover; to develop and commercialize a tool to support statecharts and their execution. This, based on work done by David Harel at the Weizmann Institute of Science, working as a consultant for the Lavi Aircraft project, which was being developed at the time by Israel Aerospace Industries. Specifically, Harel was hired to help develop a solution for clearly designing and defining the aircraft's avionics systems; and came-up with the concept of statecharts and a tool to support their development.[1]

In 1986, the company completed the development of a software tool for statecharts called Statemate. At the heart of a Statemate model was a functional decomposition controlled by statecharts. The user could draw the statecharts and the model's other artifacts, could check and analyze them, could produce documents from them, and could manage their configurations and versions. Additionally, Statemate could fully execute statecharts. The tool could also generate from them, automatically, executable code; first in the Ada programming language and later also in the C programming language.[1][2]

In 1987, the company was re-formed as a USA entity, called I-Logix Inc., and AdCad Ltd. became its R&D branch, renamed as I-Logix Israel, Ltd.[1]

In 1996, I-Logix released Rhapsody, a tool that unlike Statemate (which is not object-oriented and is intended more for systems people and for mixed hardware/software systems), is object-oriented and is intended more for software systems.[3]

In December 1999, I-Logix raised $10m in funding from North Bridge Venture Partners and Deutsche Telekom to develop new worldwide sales channels.[4]

In 2001, I-Logix acquired the iNOTION product life-cycle management (PLM) technology from KLA-Tencor.[5]

During the 2000s the company's sales grow quickly and it became a leader in the Embedded Systems and Software Development tools market; winning customers such as General Motors,[6] Lockheed Martin (who uses the I-Logix tools in the Joint Strike Fighter F-35 program)[7] and BAE Systems (who uses the I-Logix tools in the Eurofighter Typhoon program).[8]

In March 2006, the company was acquired by Telelogic AB for $80 million and integrated as a business unit for embedded modeling, the I-Logix name ceasing to exist.[9] In turn, Telelogic AB accepted IBM's offer on the 3rd of April 2008,[10] its products becoming part of IBM's Rational Software unit.

In 2007 the team that developed Statemate won the ACM Software System Award as:

"Statemate was the first commercial computer-aided software engineering tool to successfully overcome the challenges of complex interactive, real time computer systems, known as reactive systems. The ideas reflected in Statemate underlie many of the most powerful and widely used tools in software and systems engineering today."

Products

Major examples of the tools I-Logix created before it was acquired, are Statemate and Rhapsody (now IBM Rational Rhapsody), both was and still used by all major Automotive and Aerospace/Defence manufacturers and suppliers. Currently under IBM management Statemate is not gaining new market, while Rhapsody tends to gain its position as a replacement.

See also

  • Model driven development
  • IBM Rational Rhapsody

References

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