Friday, September 11, 2009

First Impression Of MOTODEV Studio

Besides HTC, Motorola has also entered the Android market with Cliq. It even have a Android development platform. At http://developer.motorola.com/platforms/android/, you will can find information on App Accelerator Program (for Android apps distribution), and MOTODEV Studio, a set of Android development tools. In this blog entry, I will go through the installation process with screenshots. I have installed MOTODEV Studio Beta on my LinuxMint (Gloria), Gnome 2.26.1 Desktop. Here goes...


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1. Welcome screen.


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2. Of course you will *read* every single line, don't you?


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3. The installer tries to detect the Java environment. NOTE: The Android Development Tool (ADT) depends on Sun Java to work, therefore Sun Java must be installed first.


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4. Choose a location for installation. I chose my home directory.


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5. It will create the directory if it does not exist yet.


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6. The installation went through smoothly. Now, launch it.


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7. Eclipse will always ask for a workspace location (on first launch). You can check the checkbox at the bottom to prevent Eclipse from nagging in future.


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8. The Eclipse package does not come with Android SDK, which contains the emulator, debugger, ... Follow the instruction on http://developer.android.com/sdk/1.5_r3/index.html to download and install the Android SDK.


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9. Since I have already installed the SDK, I will just configure the path in Eclipse.


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10. Done!


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11. I have already setup an Android Virtual device. These 2 screenshots show 2 slightly different views of the same emulator. The 1st screenshot shows an emulator with device body, while the 2nd screenshot shows the emulator without a device body. There is a "Snippet" tool at the bottom-left of the screen. It contains some frequently used codes for you to add in your program. The "Device Management" tool at the bottom-center of the screen allows you to manage multiple Android (real/virtual) devices. These are some of the features that is exclusive to MOTODEV Studio.


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12. Publishing to Motorola's market and Google's Android market made easy. This is one of the reason why I preferred to develope Android app over iPhone app. For iPhone apps, developers are tied to 1 distribution channel (App Store). Android live in a free (as in speech) world, anyone can setup an app market. And because the Open Handset Alliance has made Android open source, I think there will be many interesting app/hacks coming out in future. That's it! Now it is time for me write some apps in my new shiny IDE ;)

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