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Security

A Look at Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless 11

An anonymous reader writes "Qualcomm's BREW is proving an increasingly addictive end-to-end wireless development solution, although it does come with a hitch. In this month's Roaming charges, Larry Loeb chats with the folks at Qualcomm about the pros and cons of the company's security certification system, then taste tests BREW's highly caffeinated code for himself."
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A Look at Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless

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  • brew is nice.. (Score:5, Informative)

    by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Sunday September 26, 2004 @10:25PM (#10359454) Homepage Journal
    ..if you want a preview of the 'secure computing' future.

    seriously, if you're small time or considering doing it for free, or as a hobby, it's not an option. neither is it a real option for inhouse stuff. neither is it fit for something you'd like people from all over the world to use.

    if you want to target just their system with just their rules, it's ok. but remember, it's mostly tuned to make _them_ money. and makes doing tiny niche apps a bit stupid because whats the point when burocracy takes more time than writing the app itself.

    well, can't speak firsthand because it's not available here, nor will it ever be, nor would I touch it without someone paying me a hefty sum to do it(j2me is plenty powerful for that type of apps anyways and brew doesn't really stand up to something like series60..).
  • I have plenty of out-of-date Java experience so I subscribed to Sony's developer news 2 minutes after I saw the Java logo pop up on my new Sony/Ericsson T610. The cost of the SDK with interface h/w for the Sony platform is a bit out of hobbiest range. and I hear bad things about bluetooth security holes. Is this my next chance to write the killer app? That Sony is now obsolete and never had CDMA anyway so now I got TWO reasons to buy a new cell phone. Anybody got a pretty printer..the sample code is wrap
    • by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Sunday September 26, 2004 @10:42PM (#10359556) Homepage Journal
      **The cost of the SDK with interface h/w for the Sony platform is a bit out of hobbiest range.**

      sorry but, wtf you mean with that, the mophun sdk or what? why wouldn't you just surf to http://developer.sonyericsson.com/
      and download the j2me sdk, then have your first j2me program done in under a hour? for free, and upload the program to the phone through whatever free means you'd like?

      in short: HOW CAN _FREE_ BE OUT OF HOBBIEST RANGE?
      • Well, some people dont care for the sandbox that goes along with J2ME, let alone the delivery methods. That's one reason some go to Symbian based phones, since there is a cost but not the clear premise of avarice ala BREW. Also, you dont have to deal with the code possibly being somewhere else. It's on the phone.
      • You're right. I forgot what put me off about the Sony/Ericsson developer support. Part of it was they didn't handle MIDP2 back when I looked into it and part of it was the $500/$2500 membership if you wanted to be a developer who actually got your questions answered. I just checked the Java support page [sonyericsson.com] and see that they do handle MIDP2 nowadays...I should stay tuned or shut up.
        • midp2 doesn't give you that much advantages over midp1 for it to be crucial(and the gameapi implementations leave a lot to be desired too, so you're better off writing your own most of the time).

          also, if you just mess around with the device for couple of weeks you'll get a lot more for your "money"(for your time) than if you just paid someone to answer some silly questions.

          and for those(silly questions) there's always irc, hop on to #j2me on ircnet or #mobitopia on freenode or some other channels and get
    • You (and the submitter) make it sound like BREW is something new and until recently unheard of.

      BREW has been on cellphones about as long as J2ME has been on cellphones.

      Last time I went shopping I found a phone (maybe a V60) that, on the manufacturer's website claimed both BREW and J2ME ... BUT when you talked to the carriers they only enabled one or the other (and strangely to me, AT&T was one that carried J2ME, but with only CDMA you couldn't load your own J2ME apps ...).

      I took a look at the license
  • There are things that are both good and bad about BREW:
    • I absolutely hate the BREW API. Consider Windows 2.0 286 edition SDK API. Now castrate it to fit into an embedded O/S - this is pretty much what you get. Forget all you knew about device independent programming: data structures have fixed layout you are supposed to depend upon. Start dealing with bits and bytes. Add on top the compatibility hell between different BREW releases - here you go. J2ME is also an embedded platform but it is lightyears ahea

I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them. -- Isaac Asimov

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