DSDP Mobile Tools for Java New and Noteworthy Christian Kurzke
Craig Setera
Gustavo de Paula
Diego Madruga Sandin
DSDP Mobile Tools for Java provides the basic toolbox that is necessary to develop JavaME MIDlet. The project was rebooted on the begining of 2008. During last year two MTJ releases were made, 0.9 and 0.9.1. This talk aims at presenting a brief description of the mains features that are currently available and also give some lights on what will be available on the future.
Christian Kurzke is the Architect for Motorola's Developer Tool suite, MOTODEV Studio.
Outside of Motorola, he is the lead of the Eclipse Mobile Tools for Java (MTJ) project and founding member of the Eclipse Mobile Industry Working Group.
Before Eclipse, Christian has been engaged in various other Open Source initiatives and has contributed to the Open Service Gateway initiative (OSGi) standard and CableLabs specifications.
He is a frequent speaker at conferences like JavaOne, Embedded Systems conferences and WWW conferences. Christian graduated from the University of Erlangen Germany with the degree of Diplom Informatik (MS CS) and holds an MBA degree from the Santa Clara University.
Craig Setera is the Mobile Platform Lead at mFoundry, Inc., building a platform for mobile financial applications on multiple devices.
Craig started the EclipseME project in 2003 to fill a void for Eclipse-based tooling to develop for Java Micro Edition devices. In 2008, the Eclipse Mobile Tools for Java project restarted using the latest EclipseME code as the new MTJ implementation.
Mr. De Paula is a current contributor to the MTJ project. He has a long background with wireless technology and has being working with Java in mobile devices since the first release of MIDP 1.0 in 2000. He has implemented several projects for carriers, such as Vivo and BellSounth and handset manufactures, such as Motorola. Mr. De Paula holds a MSc. in Computer Science and has presented at conferences like JavaOne, EclipseCon and ESE Currently he is a Senior consultant for Wireless Technology at CESAR - Recife Center for Advanced Studies and Systems where he works a software architect of for Java development tools.
This session is part of the curated collection of short talks titled
"DSDP Sub-Project Updates for Galileo"