作者:Sing Li, Jonathan Knudsen
出版日期:April 25, 2005
出版社:Apress
页数:480
ISBN:ISBN-10: 1590594797 ISBN-13: 978-1590594797
文件格式:PDF
Product Description
Have you thought about building games for your cell phone or otherwireless devices? Whether you are a first-time wireless Java developer,or an experienced professional— Beginning J2ME, Third Edition bringsexciting wireless and mobile Java application development right to yourdoor!This book will empower you with numerous topics: sound HTTPSsupport, user interface API enhancements, sound/music API, a Game API,3D graphics, and Bluetooth. Further, this book is easy to read andincludes many practical, hands-on, and ready-to-use code examples. Youwill not be disappointed.About the Author
Bitten by the computer bug in1978, Sing Li has grown up with the microprocessor revolution. Hisfirst PC was a $99 do-it-yourself COSMIC ELF computer with 256 bytes ofmemory and a 1-bit LED display. For more than two decades, Sing hasbeen a developer, author, consultant, speaker, instructor, andentrepreneur. His wide-ranging experience spans distributedarchitectures, web application/service systems, computer telephonyintegration, and embedded systems. Sing has been working with (andwriting about) Java, Jini, and JXTA since their very first alphareleases, and is an evangelist of P2P technology and a participant inthe JXTA community.
Jonathan Knudsen is a Java developer and noted author of severalbooks, including Wireless Java: Developing with J2ME, Second Edition,Mobile Java, The Unofficial Guide to LEGO MINDSTORMS Robots, LearningJava, and Java 2D Graphics. Jonathan began his object-orientedprogramming career in Objective-C on the NeXT OS, soon thereaftersuffering through a couple of purgatorial years in Microsoft’s VisualC++, before graduating to Java in 1996. He has written extensivelyabout Java and LEGO robots, including five books, a monthly onlinecolumn called “Bite-Size Java,” and articles for JavaWorld, EXE, NZZFolio, and the O’Reilly Network. Jonathan holds a degree in mechanicalengineering from Princeton University.