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Back on track:If there's a simulator for a computer, couldn't there be a java-simulator for other hardware?
Referring to the previous discussion, based on a survey of 3000 British consumers: 46% of people preferred to use a phone that also played media files; 21% would choose a music player, and more than a third would never want a mobile phone and music player combined.http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,1864031,00.html
Cibyl is a programming environment that allows compiled C programs to execute on J2ME-capable phones. Cibyl uses GCC to compile the C programs to MIPS binaries, and these are then recompiled into Java bytecode. The programs are not parsed during runtime, and Cibyl is therefore relatively well-performing. With Cibyl, games written in C can be ported to J2ME without switching language.
Can someone with knowledge look at this and tell me if it means anything for the possibility to get something Rockbox-ish going on a mobile?QuoteCibyl is a programming environment that allows compiled C programs to execute on J2ME-capable phones. Cibyl uses GCC to compile the C programs to MIPS binaries, and these are then recompiled into Java bytecode. The programs are not parsed during runtime, and Cibyl is therefore relatively well-performing. With Cibyl, games written in C can be ported to J2ME without switching language. http://spel.bth.se/index.php/Cibyl
What I do think is absurd is porting rockbox to jme. Why? Rockbox is developed as a DAP firmware, which means it manages the hardware of the device and provides functionality to the device. You can't and shouldn't do this kind of work through jme.
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