Andyroid Mac

Andyroid free download, and many more programs. Join or Sign In. Sign in to add and modify your software. Run your Android apps directly from your Mac. Connects Win/Mac with Android apps for launching, push notifications and storage Enables app download from any desktop browser direct to Andy OS Ensures most up to date Android OS at all times Brings your favorite communication and entertainment mobile apps to the desktop. Andyroid android emulator is available for both Windows and Mac OS, so users can download and install the andyroid emulator onto their PC and enjoy your favorite apps on your computer and laptop. Andyroid acts as a bridge between your desktop and your mobile, it will provide seamless sync between the mobile and desktop.

  1. Android File Transfer App
  2. Android Mac
  3. Emulateur Android Mac
  4. Android Macro

Mac sales have been growing ever since Apple moved from PowerPC to Intel processors, in no small part because that made it possible to run Windows on Macs at full speed. No more Intel emulation. No more DOS cards. Boot Camp and then virtualization apps made it easy to run other operating systems on Intel-based Macs.

The best low-end virtualization solution is VirtualBox, a free virtualizer for modern Macs. I don’t do Windows, but VirtualBox lets you work in Linux, FreeBSD, FreeDOS, other versions of macOS, and perhaps even MorphOS and other less-well-known operating systems.

Android File Transfer App

I mostly use it for Andy, an Android emulator from Andyroid.net. Sometimes a 4″ iPhone screen is just too small, and many mobile games are available for both iOS and Android.

One drawback is that there are an awful lot of settings in VirtualBox but little in the way of advice on which ones work best. How much memory should I allocate? How about video memory? Should I let it use 100% of my processing power? Do any of the acceleration settings work? What settings will prevent it from working?

I’ve been learning as I go, and these are some of my discoveries. Most of this has been done on my 3.06 GHz i3-based 21.5″ Mid 2010 iMac with 12 GB RAM running Mac OS X 10.11.6 El Capitan, but I have also run VirtualBox and Andy on my 2.0 GHz Core Duo 13.3″ Late 2008 Aluminum MacBook with 12 GB RAM and El Capitan. The MacBook is quite a bit slower with Andy than the i3-based iMac.

Android Mac

Installing Andy

First of all, if you’ve installed Andy, VirtualBox, or Advanced Mac Cleaner in the past, put them in the Trash before running the installer for the current version. Sometimes the installer balks at previous versions.

Andyroid Mac

Emulateur Android Mac

When you install Andy on a Mac, it installs VirtualBox for you. It also offers to install Advanced Mac Cleaner and make Yahoo! your default search engine. I am leery of free utility apps that want to put themselves in your startup queue and come from unknown sources. And Yahoo! is about the worst search engine ever, so I skipped installing either of these.

Andy installs its own copy of VirtualBox (version 5.0.18 r106667), and I’ve learned the hard way that you don’t want to update it to the latest version. Andy will not be happy if you do. Once everything is installed, double-click on Andy just to make sure it runs.

VirtualBox Settings

Once you know it runs, install whatever game or app you want to use with the Android emulator using the Google Play store and make sure that it runs acceptably. We’re going to tweak some settings to hopefully make Andy run a bit more smoothly, but if it’s unacceptably slow to begin with, don’t expect these adjustments to mean much.

Once you finish making your setting, quit VirtualBox, and then launch Andy, which will take care of restarting VirtualBox with your new settings.

Settings: General

Quit Andy – you can’t change most of the VirtualBox settings while virtualization is active – and then double-click the VirtualBox icon. Next click on the yellow Settings gear. The first option in Settings is General, with four tabs: Basic, Advanced, Description, and Encryption. Under Basic, leave the Type as Linux, and then the Version to Linux 2.6, etc. (32-bit or 64-bit).

I don’t change anything in the Advanced tab, but if you want a shared clipboard or Drag’N’Drop support, this is where you would activate it. Description lets you make notes for yourself, and Encryption is probably best avoided, at least for now.

Settings: System

The System section has three tabs: Motherboard, Processor, and Acceleration. Unless RAM is really at a premium in your Mac, I suggest you boost it from the stock 1280 MB to 2048 MB or beyond. It can’t hurt and may improve performance. Some suggest setting it at 4096 MB* if you have enough system memory. In the Boot Order section, you can turn off Optical unless you might be booting Linux or something else from a CD or DVD.

* Andy is a 32-bit app and can only use up to 3,072 MB of RAM.

I have fiddled with the Chipset and Pointing Device settings, but nowadays I just leave them at default. I do the same with the Extended Features.

Andyroid

The Processor tab lets you determine how many cores VirtualBox assigns to your virtualized operating system. My Intel Macs are all dual-core, so I let VirtualBox use both of them. You can also set an Execution Cap, which will prevent the virtualized OS from totally taking over your Mac. I usually set that at 90% on my older, slower MacBook and 95% on the iMac. That allows background tasks enough elbow room to run without cutting into your Android emulation significantly. “Enable PAE/NX” under Extended Features seems to be a Windows thing; you can ignore it unless you’re virtualizing Windows.

The third tab is Acceleration, and that’s the first one to really frustrate me. You have five acceleration options plus None. Based on your OS and hardware, VirtualBox should pick the best option for your system. Hardware Virtualization is only available on Intel Core i7 CPUs; if your Mac has an i7, click Enable Nested Paging for significantly faster paging.

Settings: Display

On my iMac, the default setting in Video Memory is 12 MB. Since I have 12 GB of RAM in this iMac, I boost this to 20-24 MB. It can’t hurt.

I don’t worry about multiple monitors or Scale Factor. For Andy, you probably don’t need to either. If your Mac has a Retina Display, enable HiDPI Support.

I have tried to Enable 3D Acceleration, but when I do, Andy never completes the boot process. If I try to Enable 2D Video Acceleration, VirtualBox warns me that this is an invalid setting.

There are tabs for Remote Display and Video Capture, neither of which I have had a reason to try.

Settings: The Rest

I just leave these as is.

How Well Does It Work?

Andy runs an x86 version of Android, and it seems to run apps correctly. It’s not particularly fast on my 2.0 GHz Core 2 Duo MacBook, but an adequate performer on the 3.06 i3-based iMac.

Mac

One huge plus is that you get to use your Mac’s keyboard for text input. I learned to touch-type in high school, so this is much faster than the on-screen keyboard. Also, the mouse cursor gives you more precise control than your finger on an Android phone or tablet.

But there are drawbacks, things that you can’t do like zooming in and out, multi-finger gestures, and other things that are so easy with a touch interface. I don’t find Clash of Clans practical on my iMac, although it does look much nicer on Andy than on my 4″ iPhone SE.

Update: You can zoom in and out by holding down the Option key and holding down the mouse button (left button on a non-Apple mouse).

Is It Worth It?

Until I figured out how to use BlueStacks, which is billed as an app player and not a full-fledged Android environment, I found Andy had some benefits over my iPhone or my 7″ Android Fire, mostly in the resolution department. It works, but it is slow and has some touch-based limitations not present in a real Android device.

keywords: #andyroid #androidemulation

short link: https://goo.gl/RLWfVg

Just plugged in a USB cable to get your Android phone or tablet connected to Mac, but nothing happened? That's true. Mac can't detect and recognize Android phone or tablet, let alone mount it as an external hard drive. In case like this, is it possible to transfer music, playlists, movies, photos and other files to and from your Android phone or tablet on Mac? How can you do it?

Well, to use Android on Mac, you can draw support from some third-party tools. Here are 3 of them: Wondershare TunesGo for Android, Android file transfer and Samsung Kies for Mac. In the part 1, I'd like to introduce the 3 software to you in details.

Part 1. 3 Software to Easily Connect Android to Mac

Macbook

1. Wondershare TunesGo for Android (Mac)

Just jump ship from iPhone, iPad or iPod to an Android device, like Google Nexus 5, but have stored tons of songs, movies in iTunes which you don't want to leave behind? Like using iTunes to manage all your media files and eager to import playlists and videos from your Android device to it for playing? If that's what you want, Wondershare TunesGo for Android (Mac) is the best software for you. It's easy-to-use software, which lets you sync media files between iTunes/Mac and Android device without any hassle.

Features:

  • Sync entire iTunes library to Android with a single click
  • Sync or drag and drop selected songs, playlists, movies and more from iTunes to Android.
  • Transfer Android media files to iTunes as easy as pie.
  • Copy music, videos, document files and photos from Mac to Android by dragging and dropping.

Connection way: It lets your Android device connected to Mac with an Android USB cable.

Pros:

  • It has a brief interface.
  • You are skilled at using it even at your first try.
  • It supports 2000 + Android devices, including Samsung, Sony, Google, HTC, Motorola, LG, HUAWEI and more.
  • It's fully compatible with Android (from Android 2.1 to Android 7.0).

Cons:

  • It's not free.

2. Android file transfer

Android file transfer is created by Google, mainly used for you to manage your Android device on Mac freely. It can mount your Android device as an external hard drive, so you can transfer data from Android to Mac and vice versa.

Features:

  • Mount your Android device as an external hard drive.
  • Open any folder or file saved on the SD card of your Android device.
  • Transfer music, video, photos and document files to and from Mac.

Android Macro

Emulator

Connection way: It allows connecting Android to Mac via an Android USB cable.

Pros:

  • It's free.
  • You have easy access to the SD card of your Android device.

Cons:

  • It can't be used when Samsung Kies is installed.
  • It often fails to detect your Android device.
  • It only support Android 3.0 and up.

3. Samsung Kies 3 for Mac

Samsung Kies 3 for Mac is created by Samsung, to help you manage your Samsung device on Mac for free. With it, you can transfer contacts, music, video and contacts to and from your Android device, backup and restore phone data and upgrade firmware.

Features:

  • Import and export music, video, contacts, photos and podcasts.
  • Backup contents on your Samsung device to Mac and restore safely.
  • Purchase apps from Galaxy Apps to your Samsung Galaxy device.
  • Upgrade the latest firmware for your Samsung device.

Connection way: It connects Android phone to Mac with a USB cable.

Pros:

  • It's totally free.
  • It has many salient features for you to manage your Samsung device.

Cons:

  • It only support Samsung device.
  • It often fails to connect your Samsung device.

Part 2. Step-by-step Guide for USB Tethering of Android to Mac

You can tether your Android device with your Mac and for that you will have to use third-party application. Here I used HoRNDIS as the third party application. You can download the latest version of HoRNDIS.

After downloading it, you should install it on your Mac and then connect your Android phone to the Mac using data cable. Now from the notification menu enter Settings on your android device.

Then go to Wireless & Networks on your device as shown on the left side of the above picture where you will have to touch on Tethering & Portable Hotspot. Then a new menu will appear as the picture on right side. As shown there Select USB TETHERING and then your Android device will be tethered with Mac. Remember, you must be connected to a data or wifi network to make this work.

Android Manager - One Stop Solution to Manage Your Mobile Lifestyle

  • Backup your music, photos, videos, contacts, SMS etc. to computer and restore them easily
  • Manage, export&import your Contacts and SMS, deduplicate Contacts, reply SMS with computer
  • One-click Root - root your Android phones/tablets to take full control of your device
  • Phone to Phone Transfer - transfer music, photos, videos, contacts, SMS between two mobiles ( both Android and iPhone are supported)
  • App Manager - Install, uninstall, import or backup Apps in batch
  • Gif Maker - create Gif from photos, motion photos, videos
  • iTunes Manager - Sync iTunes Music to Android or transfer music from Android to iTunes
  • Fully compatible with 3000+ Android devices (Android 2.2 - Android 8.0) from Samsung, LG, HTC, Huawei, Motorola, Sony etc.