Free Newsletter
JavaME not dead yet, Sun contends
Reports of JavaME's imminent death are greatly exaggerated, according to Sun Microsystems vice president James Gosling. In a blog post denying that the Java Micro Edition platform is facing extinction in favor of the desktop-centric Java Standard Edition, Gosling writes: "Some folks are far too eager to misinterpret statements and put words in my mouth. The early versions of JavaME were very simple and limited, a direct reflection of the fact that early phones themselves were simple and limited: we had to work with what we had. But as time has passed, and cell phones have become more powerful and capable, JavaME has grown up too. Cell phones are becoming the new desktop. We've been saying this for years. Over time, it's pretty clear that JavaME and JavaSE will converge and become largely indistinguishable. It goes both ways: JavaSE has a much more sophisticated graphics API, and JavaME is growing there. JavaME has a location API (GPS) and one could easily make the argument that it should be available in JavaSE. This is a process of evolution, not 'out with the old, in with the new.'"
According to Gosling, the JavaFX product suite contains within it an implementation of JavaME: "It is not some weird new beast."
For more on JavaME:
- read Gosling's blog post
Related articles:
Report: Sun, Samsung at work on "Java phone"
Sun exec: "It's a mistake" Java doesn't run on iPhone
Sun announces next-gen Java platform
Sun, Synchronica ink licensing deals
Comments
What's sad about this business and business overall is the impact media and ignorance has. When Jobs says Java is useless for mobile phones many believe it, despite JavaME completely dominates as a mobile application platform. It's like saying the sky is green and people believing it as they are blind (read: ignorant).
It's even sadder when the provider of JavaME gets defensive, when rather this should be a signal to attack. Re-focusing to JavaFX just makes Sun lose time.
We are living in an age of media noise and ignorance. Sounds a bit like the Middle Ages doesn't it? Technology is so complex that pure lies are believed by the majority.



Comments (1) | Post a comment