Well, Philo works in Waydroid

Wasn’t expecting that at all.

Couldn’t install using waydroid install. Oh wait, maybe cause I wasn’t root, I assume I wasn’t. Just said nothing.

Well, I copied it to ~/.local/share/waydroid/data/media/0/Download, installed App Manager, and installed it.

I did use this to get ARM crap working. And widevine.

Does that mean ADBTuner works? Well, I should probably just put it in a VM though. And there might be a newer malware Android image for for Android TV.

Also, to make ADBTuner work, you either need an HDMI encoder, or you know, do some custom stuff to make it work.

Too lazy to search nowadays. The reason I wanted to see if it worked in Waydroid.

Want a usable Android phone? Use Waydroid on your computer. Also, I now wonder how fast Apple’s custom CPUs really are. The only way to find out, is to use Linux on one of them. And on my Mac mini, kind of pointless, still not all GPU stuff working I don’t think.

I do know macOS sucks with only 8 GB of RAM. One reason the Mac mini is off. It’s also spyware, just like Android, and Windows, and basically everything. Including the internet.

Fast CPUs, that are basically useless. It’s all about “security” and “privacy”. Just like Google, they don’t do evil. Well, in the future, you may be unable to install anything except for regime approved.

The future for “smart” TVs is looking good too. Nothing will be able to be plugged into the “smart” TV. Regime approved crap only. They have all the tech needed to make it happen.

Did have to login to Philo with my phone number for some reason.

Well, does ADBTuner do rtmp? Then I just need OBS, and then an rtmp server. Might as well test it on my laptop, as it is currently setup. Before putting anything in a VM.

Is there a Kodi add on for Philo? Or some way to send Philo from Waydroid to it? Then I don’t have to use a browser.

I noticed a while ago, I have an FLIRC or whatever too. So plug that into one of my computers, laptop or desktop. Did it on laptop, not sure how easy to setup Waydroid in openSUSE Tumbleweed is.

Or actually, don’t bother with that, just use Bluetooth on the remote. Then I don’t need line of sight. Then I can stream it from my desktop or laptop, and control it without being in front of computer.

And you need an Android TV box to use ADBTuner. Well, maybe you do, sort of.

Just get a HDMI encoder, plug computer into it, and put Waydroid on it. ADB is supposed to work with Waydroid.

Nice it has it’s own IP address.

A VM might not exactly be needed. Just make a new user, and lock it down. Except, some of it by be root. VM probably safer.

Also install a self signed certificate, so you can see what it’s doing on the internet. Nothing like decrypting SSL, on your own device.

Looks like human beings have too much freedom on this planet, now the selfish humans are going to fix that.

Playing stuff works, didn’t turn volume on though.

Well, it could be easy to fix ADBTuner if it breaks, as easy as Chrome. Or maybe not that easy.

Might just need the deeplinks.

And I do have root as well. Philo doesn’t seem to care. Don’t have it registered either. Not even sure I needed microG, which the standard one installs Google Play. Which I don’t want. Might try without microG if I redo it in a VM.

Also, is this Android app compiled for x86_64? If not, pretty good performance. Better then compiling shit for ARM from Linux, using qemu.

And OBS is setup on desktop, and so is the rtmp thing. Well, good thing I know how to use SSH.

To use the waydroid_script with pyenv, you just run sudo -E env PATH=”$PATH:/usr/sbin” PYENV_ROOT=”$PYENV_ROOT” python3 main.py, but clicking hacks doesn’t work. Didn’t try specifying a hack though. Worked enough to install crap though.

Now to install podman on laptop. Don’t want to lookup how to install this crap in openSUSE Tumbleweed.

And want to see if ADBTuner works before using a VM.

Update

Waydroid broke itself a while ago, never really used it. Well, too lazy to do anything about it. Tried a little. Then was doing something else. Just will use Philo in a web browser.