Multi-platform graphical tool for working with Firebird databases
Created by members
of the Firebird community
Product on the market
Experience in DBMS development
Supports all versions of Firebird database
Supports English
and Portuguese
Tools for database analysis and optimization
Runs databases > 1TB
Works on Linux, Windows, MacOS, Android operating systems
Try our app completely free of charge and enjoy all its features
Yes. DrawView 60 was released as (no cost, no registration). The original license allowed unlimited distribution as long as the executable was not modified. The Internet Archive copy maintains the original README.txt containing the EULA.
Elias was an archivist of the obsolete. He spent his nights in a room lit by the amber glow of a CRT monitor, hunting for programs that the modern world had deemed "trash." DrawView 6.0 was his White Whale. Rumor had it that the software, a vector-based illustrator from the late 90s, contained a proprietary rendering engine that produced colors modern GPUs literally couldn't replicate. His journey began on a flickering forum thread from 2004. The First Lead: A user named had posted: "If anyone needs the installer, I've mirrored it here." Elias clicked. 404 Not Found. The digital wind howled through the empty directory. The Deep Dive: drawview 60 download link
Accept the license agreement, select your preferred installation directory, and click Next . The Internet Archive copy maintains the original README
DrawView 6.0 introduces several upgrades over previous versions to make digital teaching more efficient: Rumor had it that the software, a vector-based
Stop working in the terminal by switching to a graphical tool
Yes. DrawView 60 was released as (no cost, no registration). The original license allowed unlimited distribution as long as the executable was not modified. The Internet Archive copy maintains the original README.txt containing the EULA.
Elias was an archivist of the obsolete. He spent his nights in a room lit by the amber glow of a CRT monitor, hunting for programs that the modern world had deemed "trash." DrawView 6.0 was his White Whale. Rumor had it that the software, a vector-based illustrator from the late 90s, contained a proprietary rendering engine that produced colors modern GPUs literally couldn't replicate. His journey began on a flickering forum thread from 2004. The First Lead: A user named had posted: "If anyone needs the installer, I've mirrored it here." Elias clicked. 404 Not Found. The digital wind howled through the empty directory. The Deep Dive:
Accept the license agreement, select your preferred installation directory, and click Next .
DrawView 6.0 introduces several upgrades over previous versions to make digital teaching more efficient: