
Server-only means that you can share local peripherals (USB devices) from your Android phone, but remote access from the same Android device to any other shared equipment won’t work. Please note: FlexiHub is a server-only solution. Just like a computer-to-computer setup, you can share a USB device connected to your mobile device with a desktop computer. FlexiHub enables USB peripheral sharing with a remote android device. Remote USB makes Android remote access easy. Fortunately, it's easy to access android phones from PC remotely. Or maybe you have a lot of text to type and or you just need a larger screen with which to work. Perhaps you are at work and happen to leave your phone with valuable data at home, and the only way to retrieve it would be connect the device remotely. For more information on them, read documentation on developing applications for your device. Maybe your phone is one that is not easily accessible, connected to a computer in a different room, or you require the help of a specialist to fix your phone remotely. Disable Manufacturer’s Synchronization Software 4. Shows a nice cool graph of the load on the UI thread and when your app fails to render a frame in Android recommended 16 milli-seconds timeframe.It's not too difficult to imagine the possibility of remotely accessing your Android device right from your computer. This option is useful since it actually reveals evolving and varied behavior across different versions of Android To test your app’s look & feel in an RTL language like Hebrew or Urdu. I wish there was a way to force this only on the app under development. It is harder to keep this option always on since many badly designed Android apps misbehave and even the good ones have a deteriorated performance due to repeated re-creation. This option allows you force that on all apps. The destroy is a bit of a misnomer here since activity will be allowed to preserve its state (via saveInstanceState).


I find the following options to be useful for the developmentĪndroid can destroy any activity which is not visible in the foreground at all. In older versions of Android, this used to be an explicit option under the Settings tab. The steps will be similar but might vary a bit across OEMs. You can turn then on via Settings -> About Phone -> Build Number (tap 7 times). Android has a few really good settings built right into the platform for debugging under a hidden “Developer Options” menu.
