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One of the most anticipated features of was the, allowing you to load your favorite apps on Android. When PlayBook OS 2.0 was released, one of the first questions posed was 'Where is the Android Player?' Conrad Katalog 2015 Pdf Download there.
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Many were looking for the app icon that would launch the Android Player and many ended up disappointed to see there wasn't one. Rest assured however, there is an Android Player on your PlayBook running OS 2.0.
It is not a separate app, it is an emulator that launches when you load any Android apps repackaged to run on the PlayBook. There are a handful of these apps that can be downloaded from. You can't instantly tell whether the app you've download is a repackaged Android app. The only way you'll know is when you load an Android app, you'll find that it loads differently to native apps and you'll find the screen will briefly say 'Initializing, Please Wait.' This is the Android emulator where all your Android apps will load. Once that app has loaded, it will look like any native app, however if you swipe down from the top to reveal the option for that particular app, you will also be presented with another bar along the bottom of the screen. This bar can be toggled to stay locked on the screen or to only load when you swipe down.
The bar contains a back arrow to go back one page as well as the six most recently loaded Android apps, this allows you to load any of the other apps quite quickly. Many developers are slowly getting around to repackaging their apps for the PlayBook. While most favourites are currently missing, like eBay, Words with Friends, IMDb, to name a few, these can be sideloaded on to your PlayBook by following a few instructions. This can be achieved both on and.
Check out the video above for a quick run through on using and loading Android apps of your PlayBook OS 2.0. Visit the on Android apps for your BlackBerry PlayBook.
Have to disagree. I was hesitant at first, but then sideloaded one, then another, and another. I have Words with friends, Kindle, games, USA Today, etc and about 12 others and the Good E Reader app that is basically an App store for sideloaded apps than have been tested and run just as well as the native apps. No crashing, no issues, no battery drain. When I 1st did it i was losing battery like crazy, but now that I know to swipe back or use the back arrow out of the apps, my battery last 2 days with moderate use and I have the best of both worlds app wise!!
It was a lovely thought, but hasn't worked as well as hoped. All my Android apps have significant problems. Sometimes the player freezes, and nothing short of rebooting will restore it. Other times the apps are sluggish, like my Playbook has swallowed something it cannot digest. Still, the best thing to come out of it is the Kindle app which works the best out of all my Android apps, and which is also subject to the problems described above, albeit with a lesser frequency.
Better to have it than not.