The solution that kkardster pointed you to kinda works, sorta, but I found it to be far too unstable to be of any real use. Is there any particular reason you can't do what you want to do with a physical smartphone/tablet? If it's just a matter of not having one rectifying the situation is ridiculously cheap these days. I'm sure it would work well in the end but it's certainly a bit of messing about. But you'd need to find a wireless adapter that Android actually natively supports. In fact even if you load up Android with an module that creates a fake wifi connection designed to fool apps that check for one there is still no joy since the Image App appears to try to use wireless access points directly, and it still wont find any.Ībout the only solution I can think of would involve running an x86 port of Android in VirtualBox and passing a wireless network adapter directly through to the virtual machine so Android sees it as a physical device, which you can then use to connect to your wireless network. That is to say that if your Android OS is essentially connected to your network via a virtual ethernet adapter (or whatever), as is the case with all the emulators, it's essentially useless since the Image App wont even try to use that sort of connection. The problem is that the Panasonic Image App requires a wireless connection specifically. I decided to experiment with this myself. In any case there is certainly some fun in your immediate future! Best wishes.ġ) use the Android emulator that comes with the Android SDKĢ) install an Android x86 port in a virtual machine using VirtualBox (or whatever else)ģ) use a third-party dedicated Android emulator such as Genymotion (or any number of other similar apps) Panasonic Image App is an application that makes it possible to use your smartphone to remotely control the shooting and playback functions of a Wi-Fi-compatible digital camera/digital video. If I have any success i'll report back to the forum. The Panasonic Q is a hybrid version of the GameCube with a standard DVD player, developed by Panasonic in a strategic alliance with Nintendo to develop the. I think there is a way of using Android apps on a PC using a virtual environment. The Industrial
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