By: Ben Robinson, IntoMobile Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 at 11:52 AM
I mentioned the other day that Motorola sent out an email communication regarding the position of MOTODEV (their Developer programme) in relation to the Symbian Foundation announcement – well they have followed that up with a message dedicated to the availbility of MOTODEV Studio for UIQ Beta. As Moto neatly explains:
MOTODEV Studio for UIQ supports both the UIQ 3.1 and the UIQ 3.3 beta SDKs, and offers emulated debugging, a package creation wizard, sample applications that you can leverage and much more.
Java developers can take advantage of key new features and APIs with MOTODEV Studio for Java ME v1.4. It incorporates all previous updates and adds support for the full Mobile Service Architecture and the SIP API for J2ME (JSR 180), as well as support for additional handsets.
You must have MOTODEV Studio for Java ME already installed before downloading version 1.4 with the built-in update system.
If you are a budding developer for UIQ, or perhaps even an old hand, you can find out more here at the MOTODEV Studio homepage.
About The Author
Ben Robinson
Ben is a 10+ year veteran of the Mobile industry – starting his career
when SMS was a still a relatively new concept for most people (!), he has
now consulted on everything from bleeding-edge Mobile content, to the
next-gen accessories you might view it on. As a result he has a broad and deep knowledge in numerous areas of Mobile – from network operators to device vendors, to infrastructure and middleware vendors (not to mention content delivery) – and has worked for companies in all of these areas!
He is based in the UK, a hotbed of activity for mobile, and recently
became a father for the second time – as oppose to in his younger years
when he was happy spend time tweaking all manner of mobile devices to
'nth' degree, he now looks for services and hardware that provide the most efficient, compact, and reliable improvements to his already manic life! It’s his opinion that Mobile solutions should be there to help to make
your life better – if a particular solution (be it service or device)
isn’t doing this, he believes you need to ask the very important question
of why you continue to use it...
His focus at IntoMobile is mainly on Mobile content, services, and
infrastructure, particularly as regards the UK market – and with the
occasional look at devices. Additionally, using his extensive experience
in the industry, he will provide commentary on the industry at large, with
regular (and hopefully thought-provoking) articles.