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Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
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Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
The new wording for the subject caught my eye... unlike the first two! ;)
Thank you for this news. Frank |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
I think using Scratchbox and the Maemo SDK via andLinux on Windows is a great way for Windows users to be introduced to development for Maemo and Linux (andLinux :p) use in general.
But ... I believe most developers who currently know how how to develop in Linux and Maemo in particular are already Linux gurus running Linux as their preferred desktop. Though there may be some Maemo developers who will be interested in this option on Windows. It's great that andLinux uses Ubuntu (with coLinux) as the distro is rather popular, easy, and fun. Hopefully besides the KDE and XFCE installation packages they come out with a Gnome (GTK+) installation package so those who prefer Gnome don't have to install all the related packages using Synaptic and manually add the applications to the andLinux Windows systray menu. |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
Thanks for this, i've been asking for this sort of info on various posts.
My biggest barrier to entry for programming in a new area is setting up a development environment. I'm a c# developer so my hurdle is setting up a linux environment (which has been a pain for all my ATI video cards) and deciding what language to use, then figuring out how to setup compilers... (i doubt that there is a visual studio for maemo apps) my most reliable linux box right now is the tablet itself. I mostly want to build an applet GUI for hamachi, from the familiar confines of my XP box. |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
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But I don't think the majority of potential developers use Linux, and I don't think the majority of current IT owners run Linux. If I'm wrong, then the size of the developer universe is, well, as big as it is. If I'm right, then maybe the universe will get bigger the easier it is for Windows types to wrap their heads around Maemo, Hildon and Linux. The black belts won't need these posts, that's true. They will follow their own path. I am on the Middle way. Roger |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
Ok, I am interested but I am still unclear about what this buys me over VMWare.
Do you mean that I can use an existing Windows tool, for example a favourite editor, and use it to transparently edit and save files that Scratchbox under andLinux can use? Can I use Windows Explorer to manage the files that andLinux controls? Or are there still 'two worlds' to manage by copying files back and forth if I want to use existing Windows tools? Aside: Having recently started to use WinSCP and set it up to actively monitor file changes on my Windows box I am wondering why we don't do the bulk of development right inside the Tablet and just have a convenient editor and screen on whatever host you like to use and let the two operating systems mirror files back and forth in the background. This is probably a stupid idea, but I have never liked remote development systems that emulate their targets. |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
With so many platforms to choose from I think it would benefit the tablets a lot if there was a way to lure python devs to try out the tablet SDK with a few clicks.
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Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
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There is also a project called Pluthon that promises to enable the Eclipse/Pydev debugger to control a tablet. I have not tried this as it is only available for Linux, but maybe this would be a good candidate for andLinux? If you want Hildon then Eagle might be an answer but it needs more work (not a lot I suspect). I am hoping to avoid Hildon by using the browser as a window manager couple with a local Python server+app. |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
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There are, I think, ways to mount a drive -- but I'm not sure how. |
Re: Developing internet tablet apps in Windows
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You can access your Windows drive from inside a vmware machine using hgfs, or you can share parts of the Linux drive using Samba or NFS and mount them in Windows. That means you can use your Windows editor, explorer, TortoiseSVN &c. but you have to watch out for line endings. Even if your editor preserves the unix style newlines it probably defaults to DOS. SVN's eol-style:native will give you Windows line ends also. In theory (i.e. I haven't tried this) you should be able to configure vmware so that both the scratchbox terminal window and the emulated desktop are running directly on a Windows X server. That would mean you could just minimise the vmware window, and have everything on the windows desktop. |
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