Archive for the 'Java ME' Category

Voizpod Personal Radio for your cellphone - LISTEN to your favorite news and blogs (free)

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Voizpod.com is beta testing its new service, which allows users to listen to their favorite blogs and news on their mobile devices such as Blackberrys and smartphones using a Java ME mobile app.

This is ideal for people who want to keep up with the latest news and blogs while driving or commuting to work, or even when just relaxing. It’s also a cool thing which you can show your friends.

It’s easy to set up:

  1. First, visit and create an account at:

    voizpod.com

  2. Then, download the Java mobile app by pointing your mobile browser to the following URLs:

    If your mobile device has a file system, download from voizpod.com/m75

    If your mobile devices do NOT have a file system, download from voizpod.com/m

Please note that Voizpod is beta-testing the service, so any comments and suggestions and problems would be most welcome!

Blackberry buries Windows Mobile and iPhone, Symbian dominates

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Ballmer must be tearing his non-existent hair at the latest numbers from Gartner, which show Windows Mobile stagnating while Blackberry and Symbian continue to dominate. The iPhone is so marginal in the mobile space that it was lumped in under “Other”.

Image of Q8 mobile shipments

In the end, I really don’t care, as Java runs in all but the iPhone (and sooner or later, some form of Java will make its way into this OS too, with or without the sickly Steve Jobs), but it’s funny how while many things keep changing in the mobile space, Symbian remains the dominant brand.

PC World: The Top 10 Smartphones

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

As far as I can figure, nine out of the top ten smartphones can run Java ME (and the Blackberrys are based on Java ME). The lone exception is the iPhlop, which came in at #5 and obviously lacked any meaningful software.

Original Article

Saved article.

The iPhone flops

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

Well, I guess the bottom is starting to fall for this over-priced, underpowered toy. AT&T reported subscriptions for the first two days and it only came it at a very disappointing 146k, well below analysts expectations of 500k (and one analyst company, I won’t bother to embarrass them, even mentioned 700k). Sure it’ll sell a lot, but it ain’t gonna “change” the world, much less “conquer” the mobile market.

Some comments:

“Demand for the iPhone has had a “significant decline” in the past 10 days, according to CIBC World Markets. Apple introduced the iPhone, its first mobile device, in the U.S. on June 29. “We have noticed decent inventories at stores, and thin demand at best,” analyst Ittai Kidron wrote in a note. “Among the stores we visited, most visitors were not looking at the device, and only a very small subset bought it.”

Arizona Central

Shares of Apple Inc fell 4 percent on Tuesday after AT&T Inc issued initial subscriber numbers for customers of Apple’s iPhone that were below analyst estimates.

Shares of Apple were off $5.70 to $138.02 on Nasdaq after AT&T, the exclusive service provider for iPhone, said it signed up 146,000 iPhone customers as subscribers in the first two days of iPhone sales, well below analyst estimates for sales.

Pacific Crest analyst Andy Hargreaves said that while iPhone sales figures for coming months would be more telling than the first few days, AT&T’s number had disappointed investors as some analysts estimated sales “north of 500,000.”

Hargreaves had himself estimated 400,000 iPhone sales for the first two days, he said.

Reuters

What the crowd liked: Pervasive Java presentation to NJCCPS

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

I gave a presentation on Pervasive Java, which includes some consumer Java APIs like BD-J and OCAP Java, to NJCCPS (New Jersey Chinese Computer Professionals Society), one of the largest Chinese associations in the east coast. I took the tack of more pictures and demos, less code, which is always a good thing, especially since many in the crowd were not coders.

The response was pretty enthusiastic, with the host having to stop the questioning after the 10 minute time alloted for questions had run past into the 20s, and with some people asking that a SIG be formed to focus on these technologies. One thing I noted was that many were more interested in the Sun SPOT sensors, probably because I had brought some with me to demo. You can find the slides here.

Who’s the idiot in Sun who expects us to develop BD-J using NET?

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

So, there I was getting ready to try out the enseQuence On-Q Studio demo that would allow me to participate in Fox’s Blu-ray contest, when the installer quit and told me I had to have a .NET framework 2.0 installed in my wife’s Windows XP! 


Now, granted that I am sometimes at odds with Swing and other desktop developers who turn their regal noses up at anything to do with mobile or other small java stuff, but there is a limit to just how much pain I am willing to inflict on fellow Java developers.

The sad thing was Sun was glibly giving away the demo discs at JavaOne, and the contest flyer had the Sun logo prominently displayed at the bottom.

Needless to say, the demo disc and flyer ended up pretty quickly in the hotel wastebasket. Call me when you’ve a BD-J authoring tool that is actually inexpensive and not an affront to my fellow developers.

Off to JavaOne

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

Ah, the miracle of modern technology and developer innovation never ceases to amaze me. I’m like a one-man sample for Java ME. Checked my email using Gmail mobile and read Javablogs.com while waiting in the airport lounge using Opera Mini on my Nokia 9300, and I’m now writing this blog on the somewhat barebones kablog software while seated on the plane and waiting for it to cycle up. All I need now is that Java ME powered robosapiens robot to serve me drinks and I’ll be all set! :-)

JavaFX as end-to-end Java GUI solution? I’ll believe it when I see it

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

I feel like a commuter whose train has departed the station and I can only glimpse portions of the activity inside through tinted windows, but I’ve been keeping track of the announcements via other blogs, and it looks like Sun is positioning JavaFX as a ubiquitous solution for Java GUIs - from desktops all the way to lower end mobile devices, and even to Blu-ray devices.

In his blog about the opening session, Lucas Jellema notes the following:

JavaFX will be integrated across all platforms: development experience for mobile deives,blu-ray, web applications. JavaFX runs on every existing Java SE platform! Even cooler: Battery powered mobile devices
Power of Java on desktop, project it to everone else JavaFX Mobile: Java SE and rich environment to every mobile device. Supports Java FX content authoring tools. Open, standards based technologies. The Network in your hand. Environment that suits Mobile Devive Manufacturers.

I highlighted the mentions of Blu-ray and porting Java SE GUIs to mobile devices via JavaFX. I’ll probably have more to say about this later when I can get a better handle on the REALITY (as opposed to Sun’s usual misty-eyed vision of what can be), but suffice it to say I have very big doubts about the immediate feasibility of this. There are just too many entrenched interests and competing stakeholders in the consumer and pervasive Java markets to make such a grandiose goal a reality any time soon.

However, if Sun simply displays some perserverance (much like Microsoft) and keeps this JavaFX as a running goal for the foreseaable future (as opposed to quietly dumping it when reality throws some wrenches in the works), then you may see some good things happening in the Java GUI space. I think people want to see not only big dreams from Sun but also big stamina.

Will JavaFX be Blu?

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

Given the current state of Blu-ray authoring tools, it would surely be interesting if this new Java scripting language announced by Sun today could be used for authoring BD-Java. I’m still in cold NJ at the moment and thus am far from the action (so to speak), but I would easily bet my house that it will not be used for BD-J (at least not fairly soon).

Well, one can only hope, and I’ll be sure to ask around when I arrive in San Francisco tomorrow!

Java app download and usage in really ridiculous numbers

Monday, April 30th, 2007

Did you know that a Java browser has now surpassed Apple’s Safari in usage in at least one country?

That’s right, folks! Old Steve Jobs, he of the infamous “Java applets aren’t worth a look anymore” is sure gonna be surprised if he finds out that our old friend Opera Mini has a larger market share than Safari in the Ukraine. Well, ok, so it’s Ukraine, and both actually made up a fraction of a percentage of total browser usage, but it’s a start!

But the interesting thing here is that a MOBILE browser actually managed to surpass a desktop browser!!!

Here’s more numbers for Opera Mini from January 2007, when Opera Mini celebrated it’s first birthday:

  • 3 billion cumulative pages viewed with Opera Mini
  • 13 million cumulative Opera Mini users
  • Opera’s servers present 300 complete web pages to users per second

And it’s not just Opera Mini, but rather common Java ME apps as well. Here’s one app that I’ve never heard of until today called Reporo, but which accumulated more than 45,000 downloads just last week!