Unless I'm mistaken, it's been on life support for the past 15 years. It's probably more heavyweight and firmware size/Flash usage is a concern. I don't think performance would be on par with WASM and there are use-cases where that really matters (ray tracing rendering for example). I'm also not sure there are many maintained, open-source implementations for it out there. I've also heard stories that it was quite a mess in practice because it was plagued by bugs and quirks specific to phone models, despite the fact that it was supposed to be a standard.
I'd gladly be proven wrong, but I don't think Java ME has a bright future. Unless you were thinking of something else?
I wasn't thinking of a particular implementation so much as a VM in the abstract. So Java ME failed (I don't know much about it)—but I just didn't even think performance would matter much for a graphing calculator with how cheap hardware is. Those things must be almost entirely profit margin these days. Do kids even use them any more for school?
Unless I'm mistaken, it's been on life support for the past 15 years. It's probably more heavyweight and firmware size/Flash usage is a concern. I don't think performance would be on par with WASM and there are use-cases where that really matters (ray tracing rendering for example). I'm also not sure there are many maintained, open-source implementations for it out there. I've also heard stories that it was quite a mess in practice because it was plagued by bugs and quirks specific to phone models, despite the fact that it was supposed to be a standard.
I'd gladly be proven wrong, but I don't think Java ME has a bright future. Unless you were thinking of something else?