Owners of Motorola phones equipped with Java soon will be able to access Web sites cloaked by a particular Internet security standard, control a robot, search a database and more, the company ...
Sun Microsystems and its allies are preparing a new release of Java software for cell phones that they hope will prevent a splintering of the Java market and stave off rivals such as Microsoft. The ...
Sun's telecom partners in Asia are planning deeper use of Java software in mobile phones. The phones' appeal may still be narrow, though, because of a limited number of applications. Stephen Shankland ...
The company, along with Java backers, is preparing a new release of its software for cell phones that it hopes will prevent a splintering of the market and stave off rivals such as Microsoft. Stephen ...
Motorola Inc. Tuesday announced partnerships designed to prime the pump for Java applications on mobile phones. The mobile telecommunications infrastructure maker has teamed up with mobile software ...
Java-enabled mobile phones present a great opportunity for Java application developers, Motorola officials stressed at the JavaOne conference in San Francisco on Thursday evening. There are hundreds ...
Opera today announced a new solution for users with Java phones who want to access the web and not just WAP sites. Opera Mini is a J2ME client that displays websites on a phone, however the phone does ...
Most new phones have the capability to run java programs, the advertisers are saying java games but that's just a lack of imagination. <BR>When you couple it with GPRS it should be possible to create ...
SavaJe, a spinoff of Lucent Technologies, threw its hat—or, rather, cellphone—into the ring at the 2006 JavaOne Conference in San Francisco this week, with the unveiling of a “sophisticated” handset ...
Rumor has it that Sun Microsystems and Samsung are jointly developing a “Java Phone” that is cheaper and more feature rich than Apple’s iPhone. Details are scarce, but a Samsung spokesperson confirmed ...
There is still a little time left, but it doesn’t look like Apple iPhone users will see Adobe Systems and Sun Microsystems get Flash and Java up and running on Apple’s handheld device by Christmas.
Bonus! Okay - so this has nothing to do with CeBIT, but I thought I'd throw in some extra photos from the JavaOne conference, which took place the week before CeBIT. Motorola was there, showcasing its ...