What I have done so far is in app given it the same IP address & display name as the Ions. Connected the router to port one(Online) on Ion and into one of the LAN ports on router. Connected phone to the router and made sure Ion RFR enabled in desk settings and Wifi remote ON in Network settings.

Is it possible to write the code/compile Android application on one machine and debug it remotely on the emulator launched on another? I'm sick and tired of the emulator constantly eating half of my laptop's CPU.


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The problem as described earlier is that the emulator on System-A binds to localhost, not the external ethernet interface, so adb on the System-B cannot access the emulator on System-A. All you need to do is set up remote port forwarding in PuTTY for your SSH connection to System-B. The trick is to check the "Remote" radio button when you create the two tunnels so that the tunnel direction is reversed (tunneling from the server you are logging into to the client you are logging in from).

In addition, by also tunneling port 5037 in the same manner you can actually forward your adb server connection so that you can connect a real android device over USB on System-A, and download images to it from System-B. In order for this to work, you need to make sure that the adb server is running on System-A, and not running on System-B before starting your SSH session:

adb devices and the remote emulator showed up as emulator-5554 device. I could now deploy and run my app straight from Eclipse/ADT, where the emulator showed up under Virtual Devices as if it was a local emulator.

When you run adb, it starts a server copy of itself if one isn't already running.You can start that copy yourself on the machine with the device and since sdk 4.3 you can give it the -a option to tell that server to listen for remote machines. Do that with the following command which doesn't exit:

I don't have a second machine with the SDK to hand, but I note that the emulator's listen ports (default 5554, 5555) are listening on 0.0.0.0, i.e. reachable from remote machines, and that adb --help shows a connect : command. I assume that would make it show up in adb devices so adb commands work on it. For Eclipse, try "Run / Run Configurations..." and set the Target to Manual. That gives you a "device chooser" which I'm guessing would include a remote emulator if adb is connected to it. Worth a try.

Hi, 


I am no longer able to connect Amplifi Remote app on Android. I always get a "There seems to be a problem with you Internet Connection". I do have internet on my devices (android phone and tablet) . I have rebooted the devices and the issue persists. I can log into my Line 6 account on the web with the same credential I use in the app so I know my username/password credentials are valid.

I'm having this same issue. I've also noticed that for android devices that are still 'logged in' that tone search function no longer works. It just spins "Retrieving tones". Seems like the Line 6 AMPLIFI Remote service endpoint is down. Would be nice to get Line 6 to take a look and fix.

im having same problem with firehawk remote. wont hook up with my new phone. says there is a problem with my internet connection. whats funny is i have amplify too and it works geat, no problemo. please help me......jt

I recall many months ago where I found the steps to use my Samsung Android as a remote. The manual for my T7 only addresses the cable remote. I'm anticipating a situation where the remote would be necessary. Where could I find the instructions to download the info? Youtube? Thanks.

Wireless remote. I have a cable remote and have used it for several photos of hummingbirds at our kitchen window. I can sit off to the side and snap the photo. Thanks. Will look at the links provided.

My wife and I do that on occasion. We use the EOS Utility in remote shooting mode so we can see and focus on the birds. Set up is similar to Canon Camera Connect, but since you are dealing with a computer, there are some more steps. However, I found that WiFi is a little sluggish, especially on our Rebels, so I use a 10' USB cable which allows me to sit in my La-Z-Boy and watch the action. To focus from my laptop, I click on the bird with my mouse then tap the spacebar to take the shot. Almost all camera settings are available in the utility.

I have tried to set up the Canon Connect with the links given plus Canon Connect on my Samsung A13 but I get places/steps that don't exist on the screen on the phone or camera. Suggestions? Looking at B&H for wireless remotes and found four so far that are compatible with my T7 (1500D).

I'm not usually one to freak out about smartphone app permissions, but this is different. This is directly from a Microsoft server. This is crazy. I just want to check my email. Why does that require me to surrender these remote administration capabilities to Microsoft? What is going on? Is it normal? Is it safe? Is it ridiculous; or is it nothing?

Generally this is kind of security done at a corporate level. Corporations are as a whole concerned about loss of their intellectual property or privileged information (such as customer financial data or medical records). As such, when they manage phones, they have to be able to remotely wipe a phone in the event of theft or loss to protect their reputation, their intellectual property, and their customers' privacy.

Set up the remote access using IMAP instead of Exchange, first selecting the option to set up the connection "mannually" on your Android. Often your IT will provide the procedure for setting up the email on a computer (e.g. for windows). Just enter the same settings (for incoming IMAP and outgoing servers) and it should work. It did for me.

I have a git project at Android Studio and a remote at BitBucket and I changed it to use SSH instead of HTTPS. I can make everything work using Atlassian's SourceTree, but in Android Studio every time I try to push the project it says

I have met this problem, and finally I have solved it. And there are two important points for setting:In the android studio: File-Settings-GitHub: not to choose "Clone git repositories using ssh"In the android studio: File-Settings-Git: Choose "Built-in" for "SSH executable"

I left the remote panel for about 8 hours because I had other things to do. When I tried to start it up, it actually booted up. I configured it to the same WIFI network as my IQ Panel 2, and started the pairing process. When i clicked to pair the panel - it said it was downloading an update and rebooted.

After the reboot, it went into a non-stop reboot cycle: Start up, see android robot, then an error would flash on the screen, and then reboot and repeat the process.

 

I tried many times over the next 24-36 hours to boot it up, but it just started the reboot cycle.

So to clarify, the panel and remote are in separate locations, when was the remote moved from the panel location? The remote being unable to communicate with the panel after booting back up to finish the update may have been a cause of some of the behavior.

Yes, the panel and remote are in separate locations now (i thought i was going to have to RMA it, and I have a qolsys panel at my home so I was going to test with the panel here if necessary). I was down at the property Friday-Sunday:

In trying to reboot the panel, i am now back to it booting to only the android robot screen and staying there. I left it for 2 hours, and it was still on the android robot screen. I have tried rebooting it by holding the power for 5 seconds, and when it reboots, it just goes back to the android robot screen and stays there.

So I am needing to do some debugging with Xamarin Android. This wouldn't be such a problem if the emulator wasn't so slow. So, I looked at setting up the x86 emulator, but because I'm running Xamarin within VMWare (host machine is Linux), that won't work. My best bet is to install either the x86 accelerated android, or use something like Android-x86 from my host machine.

I am looking at making a budget media centre. I am new to Linux and have not yet installed it but think I can manage. I want to use Ubuntu and would like to use my Android phones to control or work as a remote for media playing to a TV.

It is XMouse and it is open-source. No ads and no nags. You can use it as a mouse, keyboard, or remote control with programmable buttons (execute any command you want). Maybe not the greatest user interface (takes some time to understand and get used to it), but it works well.

+1 for a total mix remote on Android. Why do we have to buy expensive propriety devices like Ipad to control Totalmix or otherwise buy more expensive windows tablets or computers or tablets when a cheap android tablet should be sufficient? If we want to use say 4 additional users for remote it is a big outlay. I hear you say better you than me. hahaha cheers Greg

yes it needs a PC.. my guess is most people asking for Android support would still be using a computer and a DAW though.. and a lot of them maybe don't realise how effective OSC can be.. otherwise the only benefits to requesting standalone Android support (that i can see) are Android music apps or running the interface as a dedicated mixer ? i didn't think there were too many great Android music apps but admittedly i don't pay much attention to it.. the topic of the thread is asking for "remote" in which case OSC can do most things the iOS remote app does, just not change preferences and settings etc.. 0852c4b9a8

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