Sun launches updated mobile Java standard
IDG News Service -
The latest version of the standard set of technologies for Java-capable mobile devices has been finalized and is now available, Sun Microsystems Inc. today announced at the Telecom Asia 2002 conference. Sun also announced the release of a reference implementation, test suite and beta version of a development tool kit.
The second version of the Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), which is a collection of standard application programming interfaces (API), includes support for secure HTTP, simple multimedia features such as audio and video, gaming, push applications and a range of new security functions.
MIDP 2.0 was developed by about 50 companies and individuals as part of Sun's Java Community Process and comes a little more than two years after MIDP 1.0 was first published. Like its predecessor, it seeks to define a basic set of APIs for inclusion in every mobile device that supports Java. The new features added to the standard reflect the evolution of cellular telephones in the past two years.
"The goal for MIDP has always been to define the core set of features that are common in mass-market handsets," said Eric Chu, a group marketing manager at Sun. "We have to be careful about balancing the features with what the market will accept."
The exclusion of an API for a specific feature, such as streaming video, from MIDP 2.0 doesn't mean it can't be supported on a Java handset. Carriers are allowed to develop their own custom APIs. But the idea is not to burden mass-market handsets with APIs for specialized or high-end features until such features become commonplace and the community can agree on a standard implementation.
Chu said one of the most important among the new features in MIDP 2.0 is the gaming support.
"The games API gives developers what they need to build games in a short length of time," he said. The support extends to sprites, which are independent graphics objects. "In the past, developers had to manage individual pixels, but now they can address [a graphic] as one chunk and move the element across the screen with a few simple commands. It will make games run faster and minimize the amount of work developers have to do to move elements on screen."
The push support will allow servers to deliver information directly to applets running on mobile terminals and remove the need for the applets to poll the servers periodically to see if new updates exist. In the area of multimedia, basic audio support for tones, tone sequences and WAV files
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
Mobile/Wireless
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