Nokia to Become Involved in Eclipse Development 89
jondaw writes "Builder UK says that Nokia is to become more involved in the direction of the Open Source IDE, Eclipse. 'Nokia has increased its level of involvement in the Eclipse project by becoming a board member and strategic developer. It will take the lead in developing tools for mobile applications based on the Eclipse platform. One if its aims will be to extend the Java-based IDE to have full support for J2ME.'"
Amusing (Score:3, Insightful)
I wonder how Harmony is doing...
Read my lips: Eclipse is independent. (Score:1)
See Read my lips: Eclipse is independent. [techforge.com]
Great news... or is it? (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, this could be a brand new opportunity for them to turn their sledge around, as they say in Finland.
Re:Great news... or is it? (Score:5, Informative)
i think if you look at some other phone maker's developers sites you'll be surprised that nokia is probably the best. a lot of other companies have very limited or poor documentation on the phones. i think nokia could make their instructions for getting started clearer. it's a little difficult to get started cause you may not know what all you need to download and how to setup your environment, but all the information is on their site.
i think maybe you had problems with the ide you used and blame nokia. remember all the phone company needs to provide you with is the sdk, documentation, and emulator. there really isn't any other "tools" they provide.
Re:Great news... or is it? (Score:5, Insightful)
but as a whole for example the symbian devkits are a horrible mess, bad documentation, unworking example code etc..
some other pc apps from nokia aren't that hot either, often eating tens of megabytes memory for no apparent reason and yesterday installing pc suite fucked up some msxml dll on my laptop too(after getting the dll from web and regsvr32'ing it
besides.. for eclipse, eclipseme [eclipseme.org] totally rocks and supports nokias emulators as well.
Re:Great news... or is it? (Score:2)
Re:Great news... or is it? (Score:1)
Back to the topic, I'm surprised Nokia didn't go with NetBeans, it has much better support for J2ME to start with. Note that I really don't know which IDE is better for general application development, but for J2ME NetBeans is (currentl
Re:Great news... or is it? (Score:2)
Perhaps this is why, about a year ago, they bought up Metrowerks' x86 dev tools?
Sleeping at the Wheel (Score:1)
ambitious... (Score:3, Funny)
Next quarter, they'll expand into terra-forming...
Re:ambitious... (Score:1)
because.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Hecl! (Score:2)
Re:why java?! (Score:3, Interesting)
If Nokia releases a dev kit for Symbian, they are marketing Symbian's product - not their own. They also fall into the same problem Intel and MSFT have been in for the last fifteen years, trying to move existing customers to a new platform if they ever decide they don't like the one they're on.
By targeting Java, they get to have freedom of choice on what they develop their next phone with, without worrying about the existing software that will not be able to follow.
Re:And when they announced it (Score:3, Interesting)
Eclipse Con 2006 [eclipsecon.org]
There's also just recently been a bunch of them. Second or so one since eclipse went opensource, and a whole bunch of organisations that jumped on board are starting to show off cool stuff
(including the eclipse foundation themselves, there's been a number of nifty improvements)
Re:Nokie Tech (Score:3, Insightful)
How is Nokia investin
IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:5, Interesting)
Eclipse really is an incredible java ide. I'd be thrilled to see someone extend it or create an IDE for PHP that was on the same level of quality as ecipse. (And no the 1-2 PHP plugins for Eclipse aren't even remotely in the same ball park.)
I would go as far to say that Eclipse itself has been such a pleasure to work with that it's encouraged me to write more java. If you haven't checked it out, you're really missing out.
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:4, Informative)
Seems to do everything I'd expect a PHP IDE to do.
I've even used it on the natively compiled eclipse that comes with fedora core 4
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:2)
I also get the feeling it's "pudgy" as it seems to slow the startup of eclipse by several seconds. It feels very "thrown together" for lack of a better phrase.
I know I'm badmouthing it but I am glad it's out there and someone's working on it. Hopefully it will reach the quality level of eclipse soon.
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:2)
I stuck with it for a week, but compared to jEdit, Eclipse, at least for PH
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:2)
Its feature set sounds even more limited than phpEclipse: "The PHPParser plugin is a PHP 4/5 parser that will highlight your syntax errors."
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:2)
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:1)
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:2)
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:1)
Re:IMHO, I don't think this means much. (Score:1)
Yes, companies like Nokia just notice products are sort of suitable for them and then decide to dedicate money and personnel expanding it. Wrong answer. Real reason is of course that there is no money to be made in mobile development tools and no IDE company is going to put too much effo
Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:4, Informative)
How about, instead of that, they try to make their own phones have full support for J2ME? Nokia wouldn't know a standard-compliant MIDP implementation if it bit them in the ass, and they actually charge you a couple hundred bucks to report bugs in their phones to anyone with a clue.
I appreciate Eclipse, but none of my company's code can use it. Know why? Because of the huge piles of conditional compilation and build scripts that we need to build separate applications for each of Nokia's phones, because no two have the same set of gross standards-noncompliances; Nokia has done more than any company I know of to make "write once run anywhere" the joke that it is.
Nokia should get their own house in order before they try to grub up open-source PR.
Re:Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:2)
Re:Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.vortoj.com/sjpp/ [vortoj.com] comes in handy to have conditional code and still be able to use an IDE.
It would be nice if the j2me emulators could run in the debugger consistently though. Maybe Nokia could help improve that.
Re:Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:1)
Re:Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:1)
Re:Nokia should fix themselves first (Score:2, Insightful)
Have you worked with other manufacturers' phones? Don't tell me that Nokia has worse standards compliance than e.g. SonyEricsson P910i, which looks like its "Java support" was written by a stoned teenager over a weekend...
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:But... (Score:1)
Re:But... (Score:1)
Hear that pounding? (Score:1, Interesting)
Come on you guys, open source Java already! With a real open source license this time please.
Get on board and Java just might become more powerful than even you realized. Sure, you give up total control (so I guess it's just a matter of whats more important, seeing your technology succeed or maintaining control). Ignore reality and Sun Java will become irrelevant.
I use this program at school (Score:1)
Surprising (Score:3, Interesting)
J2ME is a doomed environment. They needed years to come with a basic standard like MIDP 2.0 . And Bluetooth and other mobile features aren't even part of it.
It looks exactly like the micro computer market in the early 80's. And guess what...Who has the most "easy" environment for developers. Yes you name it. M***
Well thx There are still Blackberry for Java coders like me.
Nokia... Please amend the last sentence to: (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nokia... Please amend the last sentence to: (Score:2)
Wonderful! (Score:1)
But... (Score:1)
Re:But... (Score:1)
Eclipse has lots of companies on board (Score:1, Informative)
Eclipse is great. It comes with best-of-breed Java development tools (JDT) and you can get C/C++ tooling (CDT) and tooling for other languages, to add to it. There's also lots of plugins written by 3rd parties [eclipseplugincentral.com]. Much of the development work on Eclipse is done by IBM, but many other companies are involved. I believe QNX is heavily involved in the CDT project, for example. Anybody can write their own plug
J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:3, Funny)
Also, I wonder if they could contribute to Eclipse by making it faster. Eclipse runs like a dog on my 900MHz CPU , it's even slower than JBuilder (which is saying something). It doesn't have much more functionality than older IDEs which ran fine on a 100MHz CPU (it can put squiggles under spelling mistakes and it can make your code disappear under little arrows, but that's about it...)
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:2, Informative)
I hope you're trying to be funny. The M in J2ME stands for mobile.
It doesn't have much more functionality than older IDEs which ran fine on a 100MHz CPU (it can put squiggles under spelling mistakes and it can make your code disappear under little arrows, but that's about it...)
You obviously haven't spent the time to actually learn what functionality Eclipse provides. As for speed, Eclipse 3.1 for Linux ran perfectly fine on my AMD Duron 1GHz (before I upgraded). If you
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:2)
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:2)
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:1)
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:1)
I noticed that NetBeans comes bundled with Eclipse. If it were 'yet another IDE', why would they bother making that bundle? Again it seems reasonable to expect that it does something that Eclipse doesn't.
Even the Wiki for netbeans doesn't say anything other than "It is an open source IDE, see also Eclipse". So -- what's the
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Netbeans does most everything (Score:1)
I use Websphere (an IBM Eclipse) at work, but on my PII at home I like Netbeans. It's a nice fully functional IDE. Its only limit is with the J2ME, I don't think it does that yet, but I haven't checked. For J2ME I like the Websphere Device Developer.
I used to be a pure text based devoloper doing Java in Notepad because that is what was taught in school.
Re:J2ME (soon to have J22K then J2XP? ) (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, as a developer I urge you to use a more recent computer system. Advanced
Convertible (Score:4, Interesting)
cool (Score:1)
A nokia 40 phone has a perfect interface for sudoko.
Re:cool (Score:2)
Turns out to be a little more difficult than you might think to create 'pretty' SuDoku. A 'proper' SD is rotationally symmetric and should have 20-28 cells filled at the start. Mine are down to about 31 for asymmettric and 34 or so for symmettric. It is, shall we say, an 'interesting' problem.
The difficulty of making a decent interface for the phone pales into insignificance.
J.
Ooh. (Score:1, Troll)
Bye bye "The Trouble with Open Source" (Score:3, Informative)
I can't for a moment see Nokia (or Novell, or IBM, or CA or etc,etc,etc) contribute if they didn't think it would offer payback. They have shareholders too.
There's an excellent piece in teh Harvard Business Review which compares events at Toyota with the Open Source movement in general and (amazingly) manages to draw large parallels. It's a very fascination article - I must see if I can somehow convince them of opening it up to a much wider audience.
Sony Ericsson (Score:1)
Sony Ericsson J2ME SDK is already partly Eclipse-based.
Existing Eclipse J2ME plugin (Score:2, Informative)
Why Eclipse (Score:2, Funny)
Nokia's first goal (Score:1)