Hand-held, battery-operated products such as cell phones, two-way
pagers, and personal organizers communicate with other devices by
way of a wireless link. The JavaTM
programming language empowers developers to write device-independent
wireless applications to do such things as download or updated information
or access service information over the wireless link
Introduction
to Wireless Programming with the MID Profile
by Monica Pawlan Release 1.0.
Learn how to use the J2METM Mobile Information
Device Profile (MIDP) to write wireless applications that run in mobile phones
and two-way pagers.
(September 2000)
The World of
Mobile and Stationary Devices by Jeffrey Pawlan.
If you are new to wireless technologies and would like to find out
about how it works at the hardware level, this article is for you.
It provides a very high-level view of wireless from the hardware
perspective.
(August 2000)
Develop WAP
Applications with Java Servlets and JavaServer
PagesTM by Qusay H. Mahmoud.
Reprinted from JavaWorld.
Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) delivers Internet data
over wireless networks. This article introduces you to WAP and its related
technologies (WML, WMLScript, and so forth), and shows you how to develop wireless
applications using Java technology.
(July 1999)
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