Sun seeks to formalise Java for mobiles

Gets with the program, as it were

NEWS Sun Microsystems has released its first ever guidelines for the use of Java in mobile phones in an effort to shape up the chaotic way in which the programming language has been developed so far for wireless applications. With its Java Technology for the Wireless Industry 'road map', released on Thursday, Sun and its allies began exercising a little more control over Java, which carriers use to sell downloadable games, ring tones or business applications. Until now, the programming language's evolution in phones has been left to the industry, which settled on the basic pieces during a two-year-long free-for-all of development. Sun's JTWI establishes what the company thinks should be the basic elements of Java for mobile phones and lays out what additions will appear on its list during the next 12 months. "What we are trying to do is present a better vision of what kinds [of applications] will be available in a majority of phones, and when," said Nicolas Lorain, a senior product manager at Sun. Although voluntary, the initiative will likely dictate the future of mobile phones. JTWI already has the backing of Ericsson, Nokia and Motorola, which make 60 per cent of the world's mobiles. Also signing on are major carriers including NTT DoCoMo, Orange, Sprint PCS, T-Mobile and Vodafone, Lorain said. Indeed, the industry seems pleased with the effort to bring some law and order to the wireless frontier, said Yankee Group wireless technology analyst John Jackson. "The way Java was developing was a disservice to the technology," Jackson said of the hands-off approach Sun had exercised till now. "Things were just moving too fast in the wireless world." The first test of JTWI's teeth comes in February, the date set by the guidelines for manufacturers to begin adding a user interface licensed by PalmSource to Java phones, said Lorain. By 2004, Lorain said, Java phones will get a total of nine new functions, including instant messaging and the ability to tap into credit card or bank accounts. He expects that the first phones to follow the new guidelines will debut by year's end. To follow the entire road map, manufacturers will also have to license software from Motorola, Nokia, Sun and Tira Wireless. Sun's move also bolsters Java against challenges from Qualcomm and Microsoft, which make software that, like Java, lets phones download software. Sun's Java is by far the market leader, having had a year's head start over competitors. But Qualcomm is starting to gain some ground with its Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless (BREW) software, having recently signed up a sixth carrier to launch a download service using the technology. Microsoft, even later to the market than Qualcomm, lurks in the background. At the moment, most download profits are from ring tones. Artists received a record amount of royalties, $71m, last year from the sale of ring tones based on their songs.

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