If you're using a PC now, you could download a program called Andy
It emulates an Android phone, thus allowing you to download Snapchat on your computer and the delete the stories photo!
I think NoxPlayer is an Android simulator, and the Android virtual machine’s RAM usage is on the kernel level, so you won’t see it here.
Edit: so that’s why the numbers do not add up here. You might check the setting: https://www.bignox.com/blog/customize-cpu-and-ram-assigned-to-the-player/
Top tip! As somebody who doesn't use anything Apple, I use a combo of Midori (WebKit-based browser for Linux) and also Appetize.io (has iPhone device testing capabilities) for seeing if my projects actually work on the excuse of a browser. Both are free (sign up for Appetize.io account to bypass 1 min limit) and save you from having to buy a Mac!
If someone doesn't have any Android device and wants to see what all the ~~fuzz~~ fuss is about (or wants to play Android games in their PC/big screen with gamepad support), you can try an Android emulator like Bluestacks (or the faster and better for gaming) "Andy" .
Both are free, and run fairly well, setting up Andy is a bit "harder" (or was at least, but its a piece of cake if you are used to emulators) but Bluestacks is seriously a breeze to install.
Take 2-3 weeks vacation. Spend all of that time learning to code Java. Ignore everything you might encounter about server-side code (J2EE) or mobile code (J2ME). Try the tutorials at thenewboston. Ignore anything with game or Javascript in the title. Focus. If you had more time or pick this stuff up very quickly, you could learn OO principles along the way.
Prepare yourself for the possibility that you won't "get" programming. It's okay. Not everybody can program. If someone tells you it's easy and you're not trying hard enough, that's bullshit. If someone tells you it's easy and you're not smart enough, that's bullshit. Some people don't get programming just like some other people don't get physics or electrical wiring or anatomy or staying out of jail. It's just that people's minds don't all work the same way and we don't all have the same aptitudes. Some people think they can program, but it's beneath them. You're clearly not in that last group.
Got that? Now take another 2-3 weeks vacation. All that stuff you learned about Java is just the foundation. Now that you know how to generally program in the language of the Android SDK, you need to learn specific techniques for writing Android apps. Just a single example - garbage collection. When you're working on a machine with lots of memory and processing power, you might not think about garbage collection as much as you should. When you're working with an Android app, if you're not thinking about it, you'll get burned.
Most of what I learned about Android-specific development, I learned because I found myself with a few weeks off and committed to completing an app.
I'm just going to flat-out say this: if this is your first app, don't do this project.
There is a LOT of need for security when dealing with student's login information. If that information gets leaked, student grades can become public, which can get the school in a lot of trouble. I would be surprised if you could get this working without the school's knowledge. They probably don't have a public API to send/receive information, because it's a lawsuit waiting to happen if not done 100% correctly.
Start small, establish a career in it and rack up a few years of experience before you do anything on that level.
Good sources include:
TheNewBoston's YouTube series - Some people will say that he's not teaching things 'the right way'. Those people are ignorant and should GTFO this sub </rant>. I liked it, it worked for me, it may work for you. Give it a shot.
Android API Docs - Run-of-the-mill documentation library. Great source once you get going and need to know the details of objects and methods and such.
Google - Honestly, as with most coding, Google is your best friend. There have been so many libraries I didn't even know existed, and Googling some words related to what I wanted to do yielded fantastic results. Information, examples, tutorials, and even full importable libraries.
> Unfortunately I can't open the article for some reason (is the site dead?)
Not dead, just auto-generated scam. It offers downloading something by liking it on facebook... Maybe it's getting blocked by your browser or adblock.
Anyway, here is official site.
Have you tried using an emulator?
Also it's not really a strategy game, atleast people playing Civ would probably be insulted by the comparison. It's more of a collection/time killer/waifu game..
I personally use Nox. It will periodically add links to games to your emulated Android desktop but it does not install them.
It's been really nice and works really nice with games. They have setups for controllers and keyboard mapping too.
If you just want your free pack, you can use the Android Emulator Andy for free and download Hearthstone from the official Google Play store unmodded. It's very comparable with Bluestacks except Hearthstone doesn't recognize Bluestacks as a valid device (Screen size?).
Like all Android devices, you just need a Gmail account to log in to the Play store and you are good to go. Official website: http://www.andyroid.net/
Update 1: Maybe hold off, some people are having problems after installing and I'm not an expert on Android emulators to really troubleshoot with people
Update 2: Works on Andy for me. Installed Genymotion and it works too but there is a few more steps to set it up. I set the device as Google Nexus 7 2013 4.4.4. Follow these steps to add ARM then install from either Amazon or Google Play App store.
My jaw dropped when I saw the price for Ode To Glory. $100!? That's the most expensive set ever! You can get it for cheaper, tho. Amazon coins has the $100 pack discounted now for $76. I don't know if it makes it any better as it's still a lot, but I would much rather spent $76 on a dragon than $100.
What are Amazon coins? They're the Amazon version of iTunes Gift Card and Google Play Gift cards. They're always discounted, which is why I'm such an Amazon enthusiast. xD
How to use Amazon coins? Android users, you're in luck. Just download the Amazon App Store here (https://www.amazon.com/gp/mas/get/android/) and download the Love Nikki app from it. Buy diamonds and it would take away your Amazon coins.
iPhone users, like myself? RIP. JK. Grab your PC and download an Android emulator, like Nox (https://www.bignox.com). Then follow the Android user's instructions. Just one extra step. Not so bad. :)
WARNING: prices on Amazon coins fluctuates everyday, so the 24% discount might not be there anymore in a few days.
I never told anyone this, because I didn't want anyone to know it was possible, but now that they are doing away with the mobile auction house, I might as well let the cat out of the bag.
Let's just say that it may (or may not) be possible to automate the blizzard auction house app within various emulator and mobile app QA automation tools such as Appium (http://appium.io/) and Genymotion (https://www.genymotion.com/desktop/).
It would be a lot of work to set up scripts to navigate the app, but it would theoretically be possible, and would be virtually undetectable by the mobile app.
I often thought about doing it myself, but I'm too lazy. I suspect that someone else (or a group of people) finally did it. It's simply too obvious, to anyone who is in the mobile iOS/Android QA automation field of software engineering.
It's also highly likely that someone reverse engineered the API requests that the mobile apps were making (by using an SSL proxy with DNS spoofing and a custom CA cert installed on the phone) and figured out how to communicate with the blizzard auction house directly using scripts.
Nox also won't run with Hyper-V active. I'm not sure why I'm wasting my time explaining this to you, but here you go.
https://www.bignox.com/blog/enable-vt-virtualization-technology-to-get-better-performance/
I use Bluestacks. It's a free Android emulator. It runs a lot laggier than it does on my phone, but for something I can set on autopilot and semi-ignore for long fights it's preeeettty good.
Don't use any of these spammy commercial emulators, the official android SDK includes an emulator. Bluestacks won't run hearthstone. I think Genymotion might work if the official one is too much of a hassle.
https://developer.android.com/tools/devices/managing-avds.html
EDIT: It looks like Genymotion is a much more development-focused emulator, no ads or any of that shit. Feels like an improved AVD manager.
https://www.genymotion.com/#!/download
EDIT 2: Hearthstone doesn't run on Genymotion and the Amazon app store crashes in the official emulator:(
I think AMD users are shit out of luck... gonna see if I can borrow a friend's kindle fire
"This application provides display and control of Android devices connected on USB (or over TCP/IP). It does not require any root access. It works on GNU/Linux, Windows and MacOS."
While this is neat, it doesn't really answer the question. OP was asking for a way to use an android tablet as a 2nd monitor for their Linux install, not to be able to control/view their android device from Linux.
No worries, it's up to the community to support mainstream use cases. Valve / Proton / Wine has created a great example of this that I hope the Linux mobile community can replicate for Android apps.
Here are some projects that are spearheading the effort:
If you don't like Bluestacks and actually want a full Android experience including the launcher, Google Play support and notifications on your desktop then please try Andy.
Yes, emulate android on your macbook pro and remote play from the ps4. It's been done before I don't know why people are telling you "no". I'm sorry I can't go into more detail but if you google it I'm sure you will find more information. http://www.bluestacks.com/ is a good emulator as well as https://www.genymotion.com/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter#!/
Edit: I've never done this myself, never had the need, there might be other issues that I don't know about, it might be more difficult than I make it seem, but I do know people have done this successfully and with DS4 support. good luck!
I used Bluestracks for a while, but didn't feel like paying for what was essentially a dev emulator running in a VM, so now I run AndyOS.
It's not as smooth as Bluestacks, but it works, and it's free.
For those who want to take advantage of this but don't have an android device, use Andy the Android Simulator. Also, Amiduos has been recommended as being better.
Andyroid works. Tested and done it myself.
Note: To get it to work, run the "Handy Andy" taskbar program, right click it, select "Andy Launcher". Then, for the andy profile, click the Settings button. Give it at least 2048 MB of memory and 2 cores. Save, and then launch the VM. Android Hearthstone worked for me after I gave it those settings.
No crack required, installed directly from the Play Store, works fine. Bit laggy.
Edit: if it runs at all for you, then just play a game against the AI. You get the free pack after that, win or lose. Same VM plays other android apps just fine, like the Simpson's tapped out and other stuff. Sometimes it forces phone mode though, which is mildly annoying.
This was posted here yesterday: https://reddit.com/r/linux/comments/b87mdg/running_android_next_to_wayland/
I wouldn't really call if like BlueStacks; BlueStacks uses virtualization, while if I understand correctly, this runs Android inside a container (using systemd-nspawn
), using your host's own Linux kernel, similar to Anbox or Chrome OS' Android runtime.
Dual boots with Windows are less reliable than Windows.
Windows has a nasty (arguably, anti-competititive) habit of ignoring the fact that other operating systems exist and clobbering the bootloader during its updates. Not only does this not solve the reliability problem, it will actually make it worse because those updates have a high chance of hosing Linux, too.
My suggestion if she still needs Windows apps for work or entertainment would be to run a full Linux distro on the hardware, and run a virtual machine for Windows.
All consumer-grade hardware since the Intel Core 2 Duo days supports virtualization, so performance is very good. Virtualization on Linux also supports USB and PCI passthrough out of the box, so working with external devices like mixers and GPUs for rendering both work well using this method.
My recommendation for her would be ElementaryOS. Don't let the price tag thing at the bottom bother you, it's a pay-what-you-want model, and entering $0 in the 'custom' box is fine.
Elementary is based on Ubuntu, which is widely supported in the Linux world, and you'll find that a lot of applications support Ubuntu. It's also got a predictable and infrequent major update cycle, though it does constantly get security updates that squash bugs without changing all of the software versions that she'll be using.
As to Android emulation, Anbox might be helpful, though if the game is 3D intensive, that might not offer the best performance. It's possible to run an ARM-based virtual machine, or Android x86 as well.
It's easier to sell these kind of games to mobile than it is on PC. But, if it's on Android you can buy it and play on PC using Andy: http://www.andyroid.net/
Been playing a lot of Tigris & Euphrates on my notebook lately.
Repeat steps 21 through 36 for additional apps.
the kernel is pretty much irrelevant when it comes to "apps". RIF is mostly interesting for its nice UI, and that is written for android's graphics stack, which is not available anywhere else.
maybe anbox will run on the librem5, but noone can tell that at this point in time. (hell, it doesn't even run on my amd processor yet)
and for an app: rtv
should run fine :^)
I read it installs malware and you actually have to pay for it after the 1st day or you have to install some unwanted apps or it installs it for you, idk for sure but I would be careful, burned myself before.
There is also Andy but I don't know if I can trust that either...most annoying thing in the world when an app installs malware and changes stuff on your PC, makes me want to murder the people that upload it and burn their website. (Not saying that these do, just be careful)
> The Android dev tools IDEs usually have an emulator built into them
And it's designed for masochists.
If a device isn't an option, Genymotion is a better approach than the android emulator. It's really just best to have the device, though.
I've tried Nox for a little while and prefer it over Bluestacks. Bluestacks always had issues and I didn't have too great of an experience. Can't really say if you'd like Nox but it's definitely a great alternative.
This might help, you don't actually need an smartphone to use android.
You can download an android emulator and use it on your PC. Download Genshin on the emulator, use a google account to log into it (create one if you dont have, but i'd consider making a new exclusive account only for Genshin) and link it on your game.
I recommend bluestacks (https://www.bluestacks.com/). Look it up on youtube if you have any trouble using it.
Ledger and Trezor have tools for claiming from your hardware wallet, but if you just want to be able to sweep a private key (make sure there's no BTC/BCH in it to be safe) then I think Coinomi is the only vetted tool around. You can use bluestacks to emulate android on your PC.
the nikki guide for the ios is really bad and out of date. I also have an ios phone and just use the nikki guide for android. If you want to do it like I do. download bluestacks in your computer. Its an android app emulator and download love nikki guide in it. You just need to have a gmail and take your time to manually input all of your items in the app. I really recommend it it saves you so much! https://www.bluestacks.com/
sounds silly but a screenshot would be nice. also can i toggle between a linear progress bar and a circular centered view?
in the meantime see here for a online demo of the apk ;) https://appetize.io/app/q4ru0mjr8bw6pukmv97k4au3j8?device=nexus5&scale=75&orientation=portrait&osVersion=7.1
It's very difficult to answer your question in a single post. You should know the basics of Java of course but what you will be able to do will be limited by what you know. I suggest picking up a book and using online resources and just jump in, get started! You'll learn along the way.
Book that helped me a lot: http://www.amazon.com/Professional-Android-4-Application-Development/dp/1118102274/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1409582592&sr=8-1&keywords=professional+android+development
and Android development ground zero:
I was wondering why this was even a question!
Android Studio gets better every update, and is officially supported and developed on Google. Although their simulators have been known to be kinda garbage in the past, I think they're improving. If it's still bad, check out genymotion.
genymotion is an android emulator that is available on all platforms and is generally regarded to be good. It uses VirtualBox as the hypervisor and has CPU and OpenGL acceleration.
Its free on Mobile. 5 bucks on steam. But you can get BlueStacks and run android apps on your PC, so technically they are correct- you can run it for free on both.
Hey,
I am playing the game via bluestacks on my pc. Here is a link: https://www.bluestacks.com/de/index.html
I am bad at explaining what it is, but you clan easily Google it.
https://www.ldplayer.net/blog/download-64-bit-android-emulator-for-64bit-required-games.html
​
latest version with this performance boost is 4.0.68(64)
The default OS is going to be built on debian/gnome, so in terms of apps will be closer to desktop linux than an android phone.
But, anbox should run on it, if you want to run android apps.
And I would not be surprised if an android port shows up very quickly.
>I use a lot of secure services but if they don't develop apps for this platform, then this platform is useless to me.
I suspect you'll be able to run Anbox on it considering it runs a full GNU/Linux distro.
Asides from a burner phone, what would the fallout be if you stuck to your principals and continued to use a PIN code?
If it really isn't an option, and a burner phone also isn't an option, you could try something like an Android emulator. I've used http://www.andyroid.net/ in the past, though it's been a while, so I can't remember how well it goes. Basically it "runs" Android on your computer. It has access to the internet and tons of Android apps, but not things like phone calls, text messaging and so forth.
Hope this helps, and good luck.
Personally, I run Andy as my emulator of choice. Only problem I had with the most recent version was they started grouping icons into folders so they could deliver pre-loaded apps. To get around this, just pull your apps icons out of those folders and delete them. After that, just don't ever update the Andy Home app like it asks, and it won't re-deploy them.
Doesn't come rooted, but can be easily enough. The rootkit is easy to find.
Anydroid is also a free alternative: http://www.andyroid.net/
I used to use Bluestacks, but it was a PITA to use on a regular basis, and Andyroid is quick to launch and be ready to use without any annoyances. Bluestacks still has a better configuration interface, especially with keymappings, Andyroid loads those from a text configuration which is not easy to configure.
http://www.andyroid.net/ is by far the simplest emulator I have found. Just download, install and then go through the normal android new user setup routine.
If you are feeling paranoid like me you can skip the step where they ask you for your google credentials to run their sync utility.
When recently I started to learn Android, and Java many years ago I went to recommended tutorials. Like you I felt that I was missing something in my learning. At the end what did it for me were the actual language documentations. For Android, developer.android.com was an invaluable resource mainly because I was already familiar with design patterns and how things should work from other frameworks. I didn't need a "Hello World" step through app tutorial, I just needed some help with how to put "Hello World" on the screen in mobile context. Same with Java - The Java Tutorials from Oracle.
It's also beneficial to draw similarities with other frameworks/languages you already know. For example, when learning Android I was able to extract similarities from CakePHP, which is PHP web framework. I found this to be quite funny because the two are quite different in the problem they were trying to solve.
I would recommend the official Android tutorials and JavaDoc from Google (http://developer.android.com/index.html).
As for the synchronization, I would recommend that you either use a standard API (based on HTTP requests), or use a more real-time solution, like a custom TCP/IP server, Socket.io or Firebase.
Take a look at Genymotion, it takes less than 30 seconds to boot up. It provides a plugin for Android Studio too.
No webapp currently, and there probably won't be. The costs of hosting would rise without increasing market penetration.
Like /u/marcustalbot1997 said, you can get an Android emulator for your PC(and probably Mac/Linux). I prefer Nox, which after I looked at it is available for PC and Mac.
BlueStacks is entirely safe as long as you download it from our official website, www.bluestacks.com.
WhatsApp will probably never release a native app for Linux on mobile. However, multiple OS's, including postmarketOS, are trying to get Android app support through Anbox which should allow you to run WhatsApp.
Personally I run a headless Android VM with WhatsApp on it on my server and use a self-hosted WhatsApp bridge to talk too it via my Matrix account. This way I don't need WhatsApp installed on my phone and it all feels like a native Matrix experience.
Probably. Check out Anbox and similar. I'd be surprised if people didn't have Android apps running fairly soon after release, we'll just have to see about performance & integration.
Of course, many services also offer a mobile web experience.
If you don't have an android device, you still benefit from Amazon coins/promos by running an android emulator like Andyon your PC. Download Amazon underground, install HS from the underground, then make your purchases with Amazon coins.
You'll probably still want to play the game from your PC client though.
Edit: I have it on Andy (http://www.andyroid.net/) (because I like playing games on my PC than phone). It's a good game but it could be just me: it got hopelessly difficult and I haven't had time for walkthroughs. Anyways I'm gonna keep the game for my train journeys.PS: Best with headphones.
It's not so much difficult as it is time consuming. I had 3 years of CS classes when I picked up Android development which made it much easier. If you're a student, try out the Android track on Team Treehouse for free. That will get you started. Another good starting point.
Genymotion is the least "sketchy" of the emulators out there that's good for gaming too. https://www.genymotion.com/
But Android Studio comes with the AVD Manager which is an android emulator. Good for testing apps, but it's not good for gaming.
Genymotion is your best bet, although it isn't as good as some of the Windows/Mac ones like Bluestacks or Nox Player unfortunately. People on this sub don't seem to understand why you'd want something better than Anbox :)
You probably could. But a wiser move would be to use Genymotion: https://www.genymotion.com/
Which runs Android in VirtualBox.
Then you can get the Google Apps (play store, etc) from here: https://basketbuild.com/gapps
just drag and drop the zip onto the android window and it'll install. (That's also how you can install random apks if you like).
The emulator is really really really really slow.
Seriously, I've had to wait hours for it to start up. Try it on an actual device. Or look into genymotion. It's supposed to be much faster, haven't used it myself though.
The game plays greatly if you also use a gamepad. I have it set it up so it can dodge in any direction with the d-pad on a PS4 controller.
You need to run two Nox app player at once, otherwise known as two instance. If you want to give a try, here is a link in getting it to work: https://www.bignox.com/blog/how-to-run-multiple-android-instances-with-nox-app-player/
> Lingodeer still doesn't offer a web app and as far as I'm concerned this is a major deficiency. I strongly prefer web apps because (a) extended typing with keyboard (b) bigger screen (c) ability to use all sorts of supplemental resources like dictionaries, notes, google search and image search, keeping them open in extra windows or tabs.
My solution to this has been to run Lingodeer in a virtual Android environment. Some examples of this are BlueStacks, and Nox.
Came in to suggest NOX - I installed Bluestacks just so I could get Kids YouTube on my PC (seriously YT why does this not have a web interface). I switched to NOX and I'm really happy with it. Of course I just use it for the one app: https://www.bignox.com/
Ναι βέβαια, εκτός και αν είναι κανένα παιχνίδι που περιλαμβάνει κινήσεις οι οποίες θέλουν απαραίτητα αφή και κυρίως multitouch. Τσέκαρε εδώ: https://www.bluestacks.com/
Ουσιαστικά το εγκαθιστάς και μόλις το ανοίγεις είναι σαν να έχεις κινητό, βρίσκεσαι δηλαδή σε περιβάλλον android (προσομοίωση). Έχει Play store και κατεβάζεις ό,τι θες.
Unfortunately, Fortnite(Epic Games) requires Vulkan libraries which are not currently supported on BlueStacks.
A future release may have a fix for this so please check our website (www.bluestacks.com
) for all the latest releases, features, and fixes.
He's on mobile. The only way to get the bar on the bottom is to play on mobile. Or you can download an emulator like BlueStacks to play mobile on pc.
Just a thought. If you can use a PC, you should install Bluestacks and see if you can run the app on that. If you can't then it would have to be a bug related to a specific account setting.
And I found out that LDPlayer optimize the loading speed for E7 in the latest version https://www.ldplayer.net/other/version-history-and-release-notes.html?log=4
Anyone tried and the result?
Im not really sure why you're afraid of whatsapp on your phone, depending on what phone it is, it wouldn't really make much of a difference. However if you are worried about it, you can get something like Anbox.
thanks man. you can try out the ios version here without iphone: https://appetize.io/app/wu5g4ft34k9u7dah0u1eatyumc?device=iphone6splus&scale=50&orientation=portrait&osVersion=9.1&deviceColor=white
will let you folks know when android drops
That's a lot of steps, I just use Andy Run setup like any other application, and it does all the VM setup automatically without having to download Linux ISOs and stuff. I used to to get the free tablet pack from Heartstone, but should work equally well for the Android Steam app.
Is this your only option for a project? If not, I'd highly recommend picking something else. An Android app is going to be much harder and much more time consuming than a command line type project.
Never-the-less here is a popular Android barcode scanner library. Other than that, I'd recommend learning basics of Android dev from the Android developer site here.
You can't, HAXM is made by Intel and only works on Intel chips. You can look at this guide to configure the emulator to use WHPX which will support AMD or you could use a different emulator like Genymotion.
> so what you end up seeing is a binocular view
The distortion isn't that bad and I found especially on PC binocular view useful because you see everything they see in VR not only from one eye which is nice when they are describing stuff from the periphery.
Vysor is functioning rather nicely an alternative would be scrcpy works the same way via ADB but it works wirelessly for free as well. Also, you can install APKs by just dragging and dropping them on the mirror window.
To anyone on mobile who is reading this (or who is geeky enough to use desktop android emulator and can launch instagram there, like nox player for example )
Go on your instagram, search for Kit Harington and pick any\every big fan account you can find and send them direct messages.
So you don't have to write everything from scratch, (because that sucks, i know) i provided all the links.
Yes, there are Android emulators that let you play Android games on your computer with a mouse instead of your finger. You are able to log into your Google account, load the Android Play Store, and download games you've previously purchased.
Nox is one Android emulator. BlueStacks is another one. I've used both of these before and they both did the job.
Note that sometimes these emulators will try to get you to load their own app store or try to push apps you don't want on you. Just be careful!
If you check in your settings, there is a way to allocate more CPU and RAM to your Nox and have it run smoother.
Here are some related articles.
https://www.bignox.com/blog/enable-vt-virtualization-technology-to-get-better-performance/ https://www.bignox.com/blog/customize-cpu-and-ram-assigned-to-the-player/
The high-level steps are (from memory):
Nox isn't mac only, it just has a newly released Mac version. https://www.bignox.com/
If you want to keep trying Memu, Windows 10 shouldn't be a problem, though there may be other issues. Hard to troubleshoot really. Try downloading other versions of memu, such as 2.8.6 from here: http://www.memuplay.com/blog/index.php/2016/05/20/release-archive/
Hi! BlueStacks 5 currently does not come with the premium subscription therefore you will not be able to remove this.
We will work on bringing this in a future release. Stay tuned for the latest updates on our website! www.bluestacks.com
You could use BlueStacks, which is an android emulator. https://www.bluestacks.com/ I haven't tried it for the FWW app, but I have used it for other games and it's worked fine.
I keep getting this too, on my Kindle Fire, logged in with Facebook. Whenever it shows up, I also get an "encryption" error in Overdrive (another Kindle app), but Overdrive still works after the error message. I tried loading Lovestruck on Bluestacks on my PC, logging in with the same facebook account. And it works fine, all my saved stuff and heart scenes are there, etc. My guess is this is a Kindle issue and maybe not a Facebook issue, at least for me....
Hey,
M1 is an ARM-based processor released by Apple and works on ARM architecture.
We understand that it's taking longer than expected, however, we would like to assure you that this is being worked upon. Though we do not have an ETA as of now.
Please stay tuned to our website for the latest updates and releases.
Hi! Apologies for the inconvenience caused. Our developers are aware and are already working on priority to fix this at the earliest.
Once we have further updates, we will let you know the same. Please also stay tuned on our website for the latest updates and fixes.
Thank you for your support and patience.
Hi! Unfortunately gamepad support is not available on Macs at this time.
Our future versions should have support for gamepads so please keep an eye on our website for updates and news.
I think a lot of people play on phones, but if you want an emulator on PC then Bluestacks 5 works just fine. I don't think you need to "learn" anything special, you just go to the play store and download FFRK. It will ask you to log into your google account and then you can switch between your phone and the emulator as often as you like without any extra work.
There is an Android emulator called Bluestacks. It may be possible to install the Ring app inside Bluestacks and run it that way, though I don't know if notifications will pop up on the screen when you aren't in the Bluestacks window.
It was developed to run Android games but you can install pretty much any app that is in the app store.
Windows 11 will natively support Android apps so maybe when it is released the ring app will be able to be used and give notifications.
Her magic attack skin is what you should focus on first because it will make her skills more powerful.
I'd focus on health next, especially if you don't have another healer. Good luck!
You can also check out this guide under the healers section: https://www.bluestacks.com/blog/game-guides/hero-wars-mens-choice-epic-fantasy-rpg/hw-skin-guide-en.html
The only option really is a Windows Android Emulator like BlueStacks. From there you can install Google Home and run it. Instructions down a bit on THIS page may help.
Well
>I'm about to just say "f it!" and learn to read the Ephemeris.
Well, lol. Yes. If you're serious about astrology, you need to use an ephemeris.
But. If you want live animation of moving a chart forward, you could buy Solar Fire for a mere $360.
My best, and budget-friendly recommendation is the Astro Gold app. Yes, it's an app, BUT if you install the free Bluestacks on your desktop, it let's you use the app ON your desktop as a program, full screen if you wish. It's fantastic. I love this functionality. And Astro Gold has an animator. You can choose to move forward or backward by any chosen number of minutes, hours, days, months or years. The app is $20 for Android and twice that (of course) for iPhone. I don't, however, actually know if Bluestacks runs on a Mac. I'm thinking not. But Astro Gold is available for iPad (as well as iPhone), if that helps.
You can certainly enter any time and date into astro.com. There's a simple quick way to adjust chart times and dates, but you have to use the Extended Chart Selection page. Once you are actually on the page viewing the chart you've made, notice the little link to right of the field that displays which of your saved charts you are working with. It says "Edit birth data". Clicking it let's you do just that. What's nice is, it takes you right back to the chart you were viewing, just with the modified data, without going through the chart settings page. So, while it's not animated, it's pretty quick. I just keep a saved chart named Temporary Data, for this very purpose.
Being a paid game on PC you are effectivly asking for piracy, which is technically illegal and therfor against the rules here. Sorry.
With that said though, I have a few suggestions.
Imo, the price of about $3 is quite low, and absolutly worth it if you have any means to pay it.
It's also available on both Android and iOS, and for free! So whip out your phone and start defending you yard from the undead on there.
If for some reason you absolutly must use your pc and are unable to pay, the only solution I find is to use an Android emulator. I have zero experience with this, but some quicky googling lead me to this article talking about the subject. The first suggestion there is BlueStacks which is also especially made for playing Android games on PC so this should be perfect. It comes with Google Play, so you can easly find and download Plants VS Zombies from there, for free.
Hope any of this works for you, and if you struggle with that last suggestion don't hesitate to ask and I'll try help you out.
After it's released on the android play store it'll just be a matter of getting the APK (android install file), unpacking it (it's basically a zip), and then doing a little hunting to find their strings file (god willing they follow good coding practices. Normal android programming has all strings saved in a specific file so unless they're doing something weird or REALLY trying to obfuscate the code it shouldn't be too hard.).
It'll be mobile only, but there are android emulators for windows such as blue stacks or just buy a Chromebook that has support for android apps.
You'll probably need a Korean SSN to register a nexon account, I haven't looked into it. There are definitely services out there to do that though. I played the BDO korean beta and a lot of people were using them at the time (i had a foreigner ID number which worked). Something to look into when release is closer.
We could definitely put the strings file on google doc or something and get a team working on it. After it's translated we just have to repack the apk and install it as a 3rd party application.
It could get complicated if they do file checking or something along those lines comparing file sizes etc, but that's something else to see after it's released (:
We can only hope it isn't a pain in the butt!
You don't have a Windows laptop/computer? If you have you have a description in the post how to install it there. Basically you just install blue stacks - link and then install the test in it.
I haven't used the sync client (windows), but I can attest to that the android app works fairly well.
Maybe you can install BlueStacks 3/4 and emulate the Google Photos app so you won't have to use your actual mobile as a middle man.
In the very least, I will vouch for the quality. Everything is crisp and hi-res; if anything it's a little too good as summon animations and global spells like Hastega have ultra-fast animations when performed. Not sure if it's just my emulator (Bluestacks-N) or a result of an uncapped CPU/max RAM allocation, but it's always funny to see and at least the game is saved from the supposed PSP slowdown.
Will you be releasing a PC version?
It seems more and more clicker games are coming out for mobile with no one giving a thought to those of us who prefer desktop based games.
With Unity, since you are already configured for clicking it would probably not be to hard to modify for HTML5 or even .exe.
EDIT:
You might want to add that it is Bluestacks compatible, this will give players the option to play on PC.
To install however, as it does not come up in search, does require:
This should show the install from the play store to the Bluestacks installation on the PC.
For those not familiar with Bluestacks: https://www.bluestacks.com/
Some games work, some do not.
For android apps you can use bluestacks. https://www.bluestacks.com
I use it for the comixology app so I can download the comics I’m reading, for the times I’m not connected to the internet. Haven’t tried anything else, but I have had no issues thus far.