Quantcast

Sun, TI Team Up to Talk Java

Companies will work together to bring more Java-based apps to cell phones.

Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

Java pioneer Sun Microsystems and cell phone chip maker Texas Instruments are joining to make it easier for phone makers and mobile operators to get Java-based applications out to end users, the companies announced Wednesday.

The companies' initiative to bring together TI chips and Sun software is designed to streamline the development of phones that support Java applications such as games, information services, and mobile enterprise applications, the companies said. It will also cut the costs of that work, they noted. The companies expect the work to bear fruit beginning in the second quarter of 2004.

TI will include Sun's implementation of the CLDC (Connected Limited Device Configuration) standard on its TCS wireless chip sets, saving handset makers the step of working individually with Sun to integrate that software, said Tom Pollard, director of marketing for TI's chip set business. Java applications access the Sun CLDC software, which Sun calls CLDC HI (HotSpot Implementation), for computation, according to Eric Chu, director of J2ME (Java 2 Micro Edition) Platform Marketing at Sun.

The chip maker also will include Sun's implementation of MIDP (Mobile Information Device Profile) 2.0, Chu said. MIDP is the application environment that developers use to create the parts of a mobile Java application that end users see, he said.

Hardware and Software

Phone manufacturers will be able to buy TI's TCS chip sets with the Sun software built in. In addition, the two companies will offer implementations of CLDC HI and MIDP optimized for TI's mobile application processors, which it calls its OMAP (open multimedia applications processor) line. These application processors normally ship without such software included, but there will be versions of CLDC and MIDP available that can be implemented on OMAP with relative ease, Pollard said.

TI and Sun also are cooperating on the relationship between phones and the servers that deliver mobile services. The companies plan to validate their Java implementation on the OMAP processors with the Sun Content Delivery Server, ensuring that mobile operators will be able to easily provide services to such handsets from the server. Java servers from other vendors also will work with those handsets based on Java standards, Chu said.

The joint initiative will take aim at a wide range of mobile phone technologies, including GSM/GPRS, EDGE, CDMA, and UMTS.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

Print 65% more pages than with refilled inks. Trust Original HP Inks. Hit Print Reliably.

Featured APC Accessories For Your System
10% Off Entire Cart at Online Store

  • APC Back-UPS ES Safeguards your equipment from damaging surges and spikes that travel along your utility & data lines.
  • APC SurgeArrest Performance Highest level of protection for your professional computers, electronics and connected devices, as well as provides surge protection.

People who read this also read:

PC World's Marketplace