J2ME Java Card - definição. O que é J2ME Java Card. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é J2ME Java Card - definição

COMPUTING PLATFORM
J2ME; J2me; An Introduction to J2ME; Java me; Javame; Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition; Java Micro Edition; Java ME; J2ME Wireless Toolkit; Sun Java Wireless Toolkit; JSR 68; Kjava; JSME; JavaME; Mobile Java; Foundation Profile; Personal Basis Profile; Foundation profile; Java J2ME; KJava

Sun Java Wireless Toolkit         
The Sun Java Wireless Toolkit (WTK; formerly known as Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (JavaME) Wireless Toolkit) is a toolbox for developing wireless applications that are based on JavaME's Connected Limited Device Configuration (CLDC) and Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), and designed to run on cell phones, personal digital assistants, and other small mobile devices. The toolkit includes the emulation environments, performance optimization and tuning features, documentation, and examples.
Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition         
<language, programming> (J2ME) Sun's Java platform for consumer devices. J2ME defines Configurations and Profiles for different classes of small memory device, from smart cards to pagers to set-top boxes. It can run on various {Java virtual machines} including KVM. Related products include PersonalJava and EmbeddedJava. See also the Standard edition J2SE and the Enterprise edition J2EE. (Home (http://javasoft.com/j2me/)}. (2000-04-20)
J2ME         
Java 2 Micro Edition (Reference: Java, Sun)

Wikipédia

Java Platform, Micro Edition

Java Platform, Micro Edition or Java ME is a computing platform for development and deployment of portable code for embedded and mobile devices (micro-controllers, sensors, gateways, mobile phones, personal digital assistants, TV set-top boxes, printers). Java ME was formerly known as Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition or J2ME. As of December 22, 2006, the Java ME source code is licensed under the GNU General Public License, and is released under the project name phoneME.

The platform uses the object-oriented Java programming language. It is part of the Java software-platform family. Java ME was designed by Sun Microsystems, acquired by Oracle Corporation in 2010; the platform replaced a similar technology, PersonalJava. Originally developed under the Java Community Process as JSR 68, the different flavors of Java ME have evolved in separate JSRs. Oracle provides a reference implementation of the specification, but has tended not to provide free binary implementations of its Java ME runtime environment for mobile devices, rather relying on third parties to provide their own. As of 2008, all Java ME platforms are currently restricted to JRE 1.3 features and use that version of the class file format (internally known as version 47.0). Should Oracle ever declare a new round of Java ME configuration versions that support the later class file formats and language features, such as those corresponding to JRE 1.5 or 1.6 (notably, generics), it will entail extra work on the part of all platform vendors to update their JREs.

Java ME devices implement a profile. The most common of these are the Mobile Information Device Profile aimed at mobile devices, such as cell phones, and the Personal Profile aimed at consumer products and embedded devices like set-top boxes and PDAs. Profiles are subsets of configurations, of which there are currently two: the Connected Limited Device Configuration (CLDC) and the Connected Device Configuration (CDC).

There are more than 2.1 billion Java ME enabled mobile phones and PDAs. It was popular in sub-$200 devices such as Nokia's Series 40. It was also used on the Bada operating system and on Symbian OS along with native software. Users of Windows CE, Windows Mobile, Maemo, MeeGo and Android can download Java ME for their respective environments ("proof-of-concept" for Android).