I don't have any association with Nokia (not even a relative working there, and I don't own stock).
My point is one of simple curiosity: everybody thinks that J2ME featurephones are dead, but actually they're silently advancing and seem to have reached an interesting level of functionality that's not necessarily even provided by smartphones. (Examples include proxied web browsers à la Amazon Silk, and integrated in-app purchasing that works through the operator's billing gateway.)
pavlov|14 years ago
My point is one of simple curiosity: everybody thinks that J2ME featurephones are dead, but actually they're silently advancing and seem to have reached an interesting level of functionality that's not necessarily even provided by smartphones. (Examples include proxied web browsers à la Amazon Silk, and integrated in-app purchasing that works through the operator's billing gateway.)