First of all, great work so far! I love the 1.6 Android port you guys
have released. It's fun to play with and although I haven't found
enough use in it yet to replace working on the same system running
Windows, I can see the potential for this OS to become the go-to OS
for any internet device.
That being said, I've noticed you haven't produced any updates in a
couple of months. 2.1 is out in full force and 2.2 is now out on Nexus
devices, soon to be coming to Droid and other platforms. This is a
great opportunity to take advantage of the new refinements and
features to bring together a solid platform.
In addition, Android tablets are being prototyped and tested and can
be soon expected to be released. I suppose for this reason your work
may have slowed or stopped, but I figure you should continue. As I see
it, though your original purpose (to bring Android to tablets and
laptops) is being met by other companies around the world, your true
purpose is still very much alive and ready for your progress. And that
purpose is making Android available to ALL PC systems, and giving
users another choice in the OS market over Windows, Mac, and Linux.
I'm a Windows user, I was never sold with the other platforms. Even
the free Linux wasn't anything I wanted to mess with for too long.
However, Android has caught my attention and I long for it to be
available like Linux is.
Keep up the great work, guys. I hope to see more in the future
Today someone came to the android-x86 irc channel
and ask if we will upgrade to 2.2 soon.
I said Google hasn't released 2.2 source yet,
and don't expect it has a lot of improvements on x86.
Then he just left. Well, really makes me feel hurt.
Most people just ask if we can do something for them,
and if we can't satisfy them, they just go away.
They don't want to contribute.
Yi and I establish and operate this project for almost one year.
We got no rewards, no contributions, just got a lot of questions
on this forum that I can't or don't want to answer.
I do not mean I don't want to help you, but you have to
help yourself first. You must learn how to ask a question
smartly on the internet.
(Google: How To Ask Questions The Smart Way)
To be honest, there are really some contributions from the
open source community to the project.
But most of contributors just gave one or two patches
and then they left. Today, this is still a two person's project.
I know this is normal for an open source project.
But that just means this is not an important project,
nobody really care or need it.
Even Intel don't care this project. I tried to contact
their engineers, but no response.
Actually I'm still working on android porting for daily job.
But not on x86 -- my boss told me don't spend too
much time on x86, it's useless.
2010/6/3 bk <bko...@gmail.com>:
--
Chih-Wei
Android-x86 project
http://www.android-x86.org
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Android-x86" group.
To post to this group, send email to andro...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to android-x86...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/android-x86?hl=en.
Please let me know if you have other suggestions.
Thx
Yi
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Android-x86" group.
> To post to this group, send email to andro...@googlegroups.com.
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to android-x86...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/android-x86?hl=en.
>
>
--
Android-x86
http://www.android-x86.org
We need developers. Experiences on linux and
android porting is a plus.
Here is an incomplete todo list:
* fix wifi issue on eclair-x86
* upgrade to kernel 2.6.32 (Google's branch)
* fix master branch build broken
* fix bluetooth on eclair-x86
* add more targets, especially for vm
* implement the hardware opengl acceleration for eclair-x86
If you are interesting to do any of them,
feel free to drop a notification to the list
(to avoid duplicate work)
and send us the patches once you've done.
Next week I'll have a long holiday.
I'll try to address some of these issues.
But don't expect too much.
I don't know how much time my wife and daughters will give me.
We also need maintainers of website and blog
who are familiar with the usage of android-x86
(and probably android phone)
and follow the project closely to be aware of
the progress of this project.
> Also, how much time does it usually take to Google to open-source the code
> after they release a new version?
Usually one month later.