Disclaimer: This is not my work, I am just sharing it here.
TL;DR, Download from mediafire (Source)
Brief info:
It is a native port of Android 4.0.3 to MS Windows without any VM like QEMU or VirtualBox. It runs with MS Windows as its dependent kernel instead of Linux. You can watch the demo video here: http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNTA1NTYzNTI0.html And you can download an early release freely for fun here: http://www.socketeq.com
What differentiates this from android-x86 ?
You can now run both windows and android applications at the same time :D
What differentiates this from android-sdk (or android-x86) VM ?
It runs native x86 code right inside of windows instead of creating a VM managed by linux and running android atop. This also means, it does NOT require VT-x and/or VT-d (Tested on an E4500).
You can use ESC on your real keyboard to action like android BACK key. Here's a screenshot: (Ignore the background windows, they're just to hide the desktop)
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TL;DR, Download from mediafire (Source)
Brief info:
It is a native port of Android 4.0.3 to MS Windows without any VM like QEMU or VirtualBox. It runs with MS Windows as its dependent kernel instead of Linux. You can watch the demo video here: http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNTA1NTYzNTI0.html And you can download an early release freely for fun here: http://www.socketeq.com
What differentiates this from android-x86 ?
You can now run both windows and android applications at the same time :D
What differentiates this from android-sdk (or android-x86) VM ?
It runs native x86 code right inside of windows instead of creating a VM managed by linux and running android atop. This also means, it does NOT require VT-x and/or VT-d (Tested on an E4500).
You can use ESC on your real keyboard to action like android BACK key. Here's a screenshot: (Ignore the background windows, they're just to hide the desktop)
