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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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In many cases, the end of the year gives you time to step back and take stock of the last 12 months. This is when many of us take a hard look at what worked and what did not, complete performance reviews, and formulate plans for the coming year. For me, it is all of those things plus a time when I u...
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RIM Announces BlackBerry JDE Plug-in for Eclipse
Creation of Java Applications for the BlackBerry Platform from Within the Eclipse Development Environment

RIM announced a BlackBerry Java Development Environment (JDE) plug-in for Eclipse - a new development tool that enables Eclipse developers to create and test wireless applications for the BlackBerry platform from within the familiar Eclipse Integrated Development Environment (IDE). The BlackBerry JDE Plug-in for Eclipse will enable Eclipse developers to create powerful mobile applications for the large and growing base of BlackBerry smartphone users around the world while maintaining a familiar Eclipse development environment. It will also allow Eclipse developers to leverage the inherent capabilities and benefits of the BlackBerry system architecture and development tools.

A beta version of the plug-in is available as a free download at www.blackberry.com/go/eclipse.

"RIM values the Eclipse development community and recognizes the need for integrated tools that support the development of BlackBerry applications from within the Eclipse environment," said David Yach, CTO for Software, Research In Motion. "The introduction of the BlackBerry JDE Plug-in for Eclipse builds on RIM's robust offering of development tools to further enhance and simplify mobile application development for the BlackBerry platform."

Key benefits of the BlackBerry JDE Plug-in for Eclipse include:

  • Extends Familiar Development Experience to Mobile Application Development
  • Simplifies Mobile Application Development
  • Accelerates Mobile Application Testing
  • Optimizes Wireless Application Design for BlackBerry smartphones
  • Leverages BlackBerry Enterprise Server
RIM also announced today that it has become a member of the Eclipse Foundation.

"We are glad to welcome RIM to the Eclipse Foundation for its leadership and innovation in the mobile communications market," said Mike Milinkovich, executive director, Eclipse Foundation. "We are pleased to have RIM join our ecosystem of major technology partners to help extend, complement and support the Eclipse platform."

About BlackBerry News Desk
SYS-CON's BlackBerry News Desk brings the very latest news, views, research and industry developments relating to the increasingly complex data-rich mobile applications made possible by the BlackBerry platform from Research In Motion.

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I am so happy to see RIM giving support to eclipse.I have configured my blackberry project in eclipse and it is running well.In the mean time i tried to add some JUnit test cases for the blackberry project.But it is always throwing error saying that "cannot find org.junit.framework" even though i added the junit.jar in to the project properties.I don'nt know whether any other approach is there to work with blackberry JDE plugin + eclipse + JUnit

It would be nice if RIM can integrate Junit with JDE plugin for eclipse.

I love(d) mobile development with Java. Right up to the point that I found out that it was next to impossible to get apps to market through the catacombs you are required to navigate with each and every separate telecom provider out there in order to get your creation on their customers devices. At the time I first tried my carrier (Cingular, now the "new" ATT) "might" issue you a developer code signing certificate if you signed up for at least their intermediate level developer seat to the tune of overr $700/year. Their "premium" seat went for $5000/year at the time. So I get mighty tired of these endless articles that extoll all the money to be made in the mobile market and articles like this one that tell you how easy it is going to be to create them. That's true but why create them if no one else can ever use them?

Yes, I suppose the market is there if you are willing to pay the necessary tolls to the trolls that still guard the bridges to the promised land. In truth, I'm now making a lot of money as a mobile developer, way more in my first month than I ever made with Java by developing for the iPhone. I love Java but it took Steve Jobs and Apple to put the first serious crack in the hegemony that has been the mobile application development landscape in this country for some time. Now with Apple's new developer program, you are going to see a literal application explosion for that device. It's not because you can't do the same kinds of things with Blackberries. Rather it's because the wireless carriers have wrested the keys to the kingdom away from the device manufacturers in all but the case of the iPhone. Steve Jobs has made it possible for "two guys in a garage with an idea" to actually realize it AND get it to market.

You can read the unabridged version of the sorry state of the J2ME world at www.j2mesecrets.com if you are interested. By all means do so before you invest time and money learning to develop for a platform only to find out that you can't get to market. Until this is fixed, I don't care how good your IDE is. Developing serious business applications is merely an academic excercise unless you are well heeled or doing something internal. Even then you've got an uphill battle on your hands. The vast creativity of the Java community hasn't been hampered by the lack of tooling nearly as much as the iron fisted grip that the carriers have insisted upon having over applications getting to market. They'll tell you it's all in the name of security. That's Baloney. It's all about control. That's why their software ignores third party certificates like Verisign and Thawte an reserves the important API's (like Bluetooth and PIM) for their proprietary carrier certificates. Don't forget application testing at somewhere in the neighborhood of one to two thousand dollars a pop. That's enough to give you a flavor. You can read all you want of the sorry mess at the URL above. Just don't say you weren't warned.


Your Feedback
shamnad wrote: I am so happy to see RIM giving support to eclipse.I have configured my blackberry project in eclipse and it is running well.In the mean time i tried to add some JUnit test cases for the blackberry project.But it is always throwing error saying that "cannot find org.junit.framework" even though i added the junit.jar in to the project properties.I don'nt know whether any other approach is there to work with blackberry JDE plugin + eclipse + JUnit It would be nice if RIM can integrate Junit with JDE plugin for eclipse.
Don Babcock wrote: I love(d) mobile development with Java. Right up to the point that I found out that it was next to impossible to get apps to market through the catacombs you are required to navigate with each and every separate telecom provider out there in order to get your creation on their customers devices. At the time I first tried my carrier (Cingular, now the "new" ATT) "might" issue you a developer code signing certificate if you signed up for at least their intermediate level developer seat to the tune of overr $700/year. Their "premium" seat went for $5000/year at the time. So I get mighty tired of these endless articles that extoll all the money to be made in the mobile market and articles like this one that tell you how easy it is going to be to create them. That's true but why create them if no one else can ever use them? Yes, I suppose the market is there if you are willing to pay the n...
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