columbia / android_vendor_columbia_build

Columbia SSL Android build configuration / kernel integration
http://systems.cs.columbia.edu/projects/
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Add cycada-jb, flux-jb, and m2-jb branches #1

Open Jadoo4QFan opened 1 year ago

Jadoo4QFan commented 1 year ago

Hello, can you please add the Cycada project here, without any reused iOS frameworks of course. Flux would also be nice to be added here, and M2 altough seems out of scope for this project as it includes multiple parts, one of them being an iOS app, the android version could be added. All of these projects have potential like Cells being used commercially, however these three projects have even more business potential, as the purpose of Cells has kind of been defeated by Android’s multi user functionality.

Jadoo4QFan commented 1 year ago

Although Cycada uses a 10 year old iOS version, Cycada has potential in the field of preservation (see here ) and the field of businesses who use legacy 32-bit iOS apps and are stuck on old hardware and the rest of the device being incompatible with another app they might use. The Museum of Modern Art actually needs Cyacada. 2DFFEC44-3205-42E6-A8E4-B2B0BEAEC743 Flux has potential for making a fluid device ecosystem, like a phone and tablet user that is hesitant to switch between the two due to the lack of saved data, excluding apps that auto-save to the cloud such as Google Docs. In the business field Flux would be something that boosts productivity for users with a work phone, work tablet, and work computer (via an Android emulator). Let’s say the user is coming back from a work project that requires to go to another cubical, and does the work on the smartphone and comes back to his office cubical with a program on the phone running. The user opens the android emulator on their work computer and can resume their progress on their work computer via an Android emulator, such as Windows Subsystem for Android or WayDroid. M2’s screen combination feature would be more of a novelty for some people, but it might come in handy in some situations where 4 people are camping and they want to watch a movie, and combine the 4 screens to one big screen and watch their movie. For the iOS remote, it would be great for enterprise solutions where an iPhone must run work software, only available for Android, so they fire up an Android emulator on their PC and go about with their phone. In the personal field, many gamers prefer Android due to more apps on the platform, due to the creator not creating an iOS app (due to laziness and finding out android is more useful, not having access to a Mac, the iOS app being incompatible due to being 32 bit, or the iOS version being removed from the App Store)