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Qt on Android 2.3 seems promising

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    andre
    wrote on 12 Dec 2010, 10:19 last edited by
    #10

    [quote author="disperso" date="1292102782"]BTW, Andre, I din't knew you were the author of Cumulus. Did you know somebody packaged and uploaded to the Android Marketplace? :) I installed it to see how well it run, and I was pleasantly surprised (android port uses patched versions of everything, IIRC). Any idea if it will be updated to a more finger friendly UI?[/quote]

    I did not know it was actually uploaded there, no. And I am suprised it was. I thought you could not distribute Lighthouse-based stuff yet? I did know somebody worked on it. However, though I am the original author, I am not the current maintainer. I have not contributed to the development over the last couple of years, and the port to Qt 4 was not done by me. I know there is work to get Cumulus in the Ovi store.

    I think work is done to make it more finger-friendly, but as with any open source project, there is always a need for more hands. Note however that the in-flight UI is pretty finger friendly already. Configuration perhaps less so.

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    • J Offline
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      jaak
      wrote on 17 Dec 2010, 09:26 last edited by
      #11

      Users doesn't care what language / tool an application is written in. So I don't think a Qt version for Android in anyway affect sales for Nokia. But some people do think that Qt shouldn't be used to create applications for a competitors platform. I think such an argument is baseless. Also I don't understand how the problem of differentiation happens, since on Android, only third part apps will be written in Qt. The UI layer of the phone will always be Android native code. If an app becomes so popular, it will be available on all platforms and user don't care for Qt or dalvik or ... sdk. If Qt is ported to Android, then
      Qt will be the primary platform for mobile development. Qt will be the king.

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      • D Offline
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        dangelog
        wrote on 17 Dec 2010, 09:57 last edited by
        #12

        [quote]Users doesn’t care what language / tool an application is written in. So I don’t think a Qt version for Android in anyway affect sales for Nokia.[/quote]

        User don't, developers and companies do! If one wants to reach the largest market share for its application, the "Write once / deploy on symbian+maemo+meego+android+..." strategy is winning.

        Software Engineer
        KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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        • J Offline
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          jaak
          wrote on 17 Dec 2010, 10:01 last edited by
          #13

          [quote author="peppe" date="1292579820"][quote]Users doesn’t care what language / tool an application is written in. So I don’t think a Qt version for Android in anyway affect sales for Nokia.[/quote]

          User don't, developers and companies do! If one wants to reach the largest market share for its application, the "Write once / deploy on symbian+maemo+meego+android+..." strategy is winning.[/quote]

          Exactly. It will be a big win for mobile developers.

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          • C Offline
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            changsheng230
            wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 15:39 last edited by
            #14

            Ha, No one votes for "Bad" :) , though Nokia did not invest it.

            Chang Sheng
            常升

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            • D Offline
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              dreevespracticeinsight.net
              wrote on 6 Jan 2011, 22:07 last edited by
              #15

              What is important for Qt developers is "write once and run everywhere". I am a Nokia commercial customer. Ultimately Nokia benefits from meeting the needs of its customers.

              So supporting Qt on Android platforms is good.

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              • R Offline
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                robson.ramiro
                wrote on 12 Jan 2011, 15:37 last edited by
                #16

                I think that nokia is spending a big oportunity to come in, strong, a fight against iOS to gain more market share.

                I´m tried to use Lighthouse, but without success... (problems posted on site)

                If anyone have way to make it works I´ll appreciate a lot!

                []s

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                  doubitchou
                  wrote on 13 Jan 2011, 09:20 last edited by
                  #17

                  I am in the same case as David one : the need to commercialy deploy the same app for all platform and actually what we are doing is a java app for android and blackberry phones, Xcode for Ipad/Ipod mobiles, Qt for the others platforms.

                  So when Win7 mobile seems to avoid Qt apps now, why having "C.O.D.E." and in that case with android would be a bad thing ?

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                  • M Offline
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                    mohsen
                    wrote on 13 Jan 2011, 10:42 last edited by
                    #18

                    i vote for Android too

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                    • S Offline
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                      Schneidi
                      wrote on 27 Jun 2011, 07:01 last edited by
                      #19

                      I can't wait to start developing on Android systems.
                      So I hope that the lighhouse project will get some support.

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                      • D Offline
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                        DenisKormalev
                        wrote on 27 Jun 2011, 07:06 last edited by
                        #20

                        Scheidi, you can start it now. Necessitas is not a "started-yesterday" project so it can be used in development now (we used it without any critical problems, but of course it is non-stable software so you should double test it before production)

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                        • S Offline
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                          subin
                          wrote on 14 Apr 2012, 05:38 last edited by
                          #21

                          Please don't forget to update here too!
                          https://www.facebook.com/qt.android

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