Rick,
Thanks for your perspective. Frankly, I don’t think it will be particularly
easy to make it an app either. I need to do a fair bit of code optimization and
on the map, there will have to be a small magnifier that moves with the finger.
In the meantime, the desktop version is coming
Hi Bill,
I took a look at your demo video of your app.
I would agree that it is pretty complex and
it would require a lot of javascript to provide
the interactivity that you want. It would not
be an easy web creation process for you.
I can see you have put a lot of work into
your app!
This is
s. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but
would like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of
for Chromebook apps.
Thanks,
Bill
William A. Prothero
Santa Barbara, CA. 93105
http://earthlearningsolutions.org/
___
use-li
l
>> run Android apps. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would
>> like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for
>> Chromebook apps.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Bill
>>
>> William A. Prothero
>> Sant
book.
>
> I also wonder if there are minimal requirements for a Chromebook that will
> run Android apps. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would
> like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for
> Chromebook apps.
>
> Thanks,
> Bill
>
tary school
>>> learning must run on ChromeBooks to be used in elementary school. I just
>>> want to verify that this means I would be developing an Android app for a
>>> Chromebook.
>>>
>>> I also wonder if there are minimal requiremen
-Original Message-
From: use-livecode [mailto:use-livecode-boun...@lists.runrev.com] On Behalf Of
J. Landman Gay via use-livecode
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2020 12:19 PM
To: How to use LiveCode
Cc: J. Landman Gay
Subject: Re: Chromebook apps?
Android apps run in an emulator on Chromebooks. I
in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would
like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for
Chromebook apps.
Thanks,
Bill
William A. Prothero
Santa Barbara, CA. 93105
http://earthlearningsolutions.org/
___
use-livecode
book.
>>
>> I also wonder if there are minimal requirements for a Chromebook that will
>> run Android apps. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would
>> like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for
>> Chromebook apps.
>
the “thinking about it” stage right now, but
> would like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of
> for Chromebook apps.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Bill
> >
> > William A. Prothero
> > Santa Barbara, CA. 93105
> > http://earthlearningso
of for Chromebook apps.
Thanks,
Bill
William A. Prothero
Santa Barbara, CA. 93105
http://earthlearningsolutions.org/
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would be developing an Android app for a
Chromebook.
I also wonder if there are minimal requirements for a Chromebook that will
run Android apps. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would
like to hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for
Chromebook apps
for a Chromebook that will run
Android apps. I’m in the “thinking about it” stage right now, but would like to
hear about any experience or gotchas I need to be aware of for Chromebook apps.
Thanks,
Bill
William A. Prothero
Santa Barbara, CA. 93105
http://earthlearningsolutions.org
Thanks, Jacqueline! I’ll file that info away for future pondering. I’m glad
there was one positive response to the possibility of using Livecode on a
chromebook.
Best,
Bill
William A. Prothero
https://earthlearningsolutions.org
> On Jun 22, 2020, at 2:52 PM, J. Landman Gay via use-livecode
>
On 6/22/20 11:51 AM, prothero--- via use-livecode wrote:
I may invest in a Chromebook, for testing, but would like to scope out the
landscape before I waste my time.
I forgot to mention that I recently saw that some of last year's Chromebooks are going for as
low as $80. They don't have
I've had fairly good experiences running an Android app on Chromebook. The manufacturer
matters. On my Lenovo there are a few glitches, on my client's Asus Flip there are a few
different glitches, but in general they are minor. I've made two Android apps that also run on
Chromebooks.
Both
Thanks for the info, folks! I don’t see anything that would draw me to
Chromebooks.
Seems it’s another world. Too bad. Education really needs good apps at all
levels and chromebooks are a bright target.
EST,
Bill
William Prothero
https://earthlearningsolutions.org
> On Jun 22, 2020, at 2:02
Despite using Raspberry Pi devices allot I somehow did not think of
ARM chips. I did not know Chromebooks were based on them.
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On 6/22/20 12:21 PM, Stephen MacLean via use-livecode wrote:
Looks like ARM just became a MUCH bigger issue!
*MUCH*
Fortunately, I've seen github notifications for the last few months that
point toward ARM capability, so I'm guessing we're on track for this.
For OSX anyway.
--
Mark
Then we are going to need to get Frazier back with Apple’s new all in
commitment to ARM chips!
kelly
> On 22-Jun-2020, at 1:17 PM, Richard Gaskin via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> John McKenzie wrote:
>
>> Could you not just deploy a Linux desktop Livecode app to a
>> Chromebook? ChromeOS is a
> On Jun 22, 2020, at 3:17 PM, Richard Gaskin via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> John McKenzie wrote:
>
>> Could you not just deploy a Linux desktop Livecode app to a
>> Chromebook? ChromeOS is a Linux distribution, if admittedly a stripped
>> down one, after all.
>
> Alas, while ChromeOS is based
William de Smet wrote:
I am a longtime user of Chromebooks in education and most 'cheap'
Chromebooks' come with only 4 GB RAM.
The Chrome browser itself uses a lot of RAM already and my experience with
Android apps on Chromebooks is that they are slow (lack of available RAM)
or sometimes not
John McKenzie wrote:
Could you not just deploy a Linux desktop Livecode app to a
Chromebook? ChromeOS is a Linux distribution, if admittedly a stripped
down one, after all.
Alas, while ChromeOS is based on the Linux kernel, everything above the
kernel is different (desktop manager,
I am a longtime user of Chromebooks in education and most 'cheap'
Chromebooks' come with only 4 GB RAM.
The Chrome browser itself uses a lot of RAM already and my experience with
Android apps on Chromebooks is that they are slow (lack of available RAM)
or sometimes not fully functional/compatible.
Could you not just deploy a Linux desktop Livecode app to a
Chromebook? ChromeOS is a Linux distribution, if admittedly a stripped
down one, after all.
You can install some regular desktop Linux software such as regular
Libre Office on Chromebooks. Some software you cannot install though
and
William Prothero wrote:
> Probably HTML5 would be better, ultimately. But, I look at the HTML5
> postings, limitations, and quirks and it would most likely require me
> to become an expert in javascript and various server technologies that
> put me over the interest level that would be required.
Colin:
Probably HTML5 would be better, ultimately. But, I look at the HTML5 postings,
limitations, and quirks and it would most likely require me to become an expert
in javascript and various server technologies that put me over the interest
level that would be required. I’m fine with
Would HTML5 be a better option?
> On Jun 22, 2020, at 10:51 AM, prothero--- via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Folks:
> A LOT of elementary school teachers are using Chromebooks to teach online.
> So… I am wondering what the current situation is with Android (?) apps on
> Chromebooks.
>
> Is
Folks:
A LOT of elementary school teachers are using Chromebooks to teach online. So…
I am wondering what the current situation is with Android (?) apps on
Chromebooks.
Is anybody developing apps for Chromebooks? Are there gothchas? Any pointers to
online Chromebook specific docs? I may invest
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