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Netmite [patched] Jun 2026

: Android developers rapidly adapted to native Java and Kotlin development. The sheer volume and superior quality of native apps built specifically for touchscreens quickly overshadowed legacy J2ME ports.

Netmite was a brilliant, ahead-of-its-time attempt to bring high-level languages and wireless connectivity to the smallest of microcontrollers. It failed commercially but succeeded technically. For modern developers, it serves as a fascinating case study in constraints, trade-offs, and the enduring desire to make embedded programming more accessible. netmite

In 2024, building an app for a smartphone is a ritual of downloading Xcode, learning Swift/Kotlin, or wrestling with React Native. But imagine trying to build an app for a flip phone in 2006. : Android developers rapidly adapted to native Java

: In its prime, users would upload their Java files to netmite.com/android/srv/2.0/getapk.php to receive a converted APK. Note that this official site is often inaccessible now. It failed commercially but succeeded technically

Most embedded Java solutions required a full operating system (like Linux on an ARM chip). Netmite’s NanoJ ran directly on the metal of an 8-bit PIC. This was a massive engineering achievement.