Note to myself, write a post about how to reach digital sovereignty. The beauty here is that unlike a native Linux or Android install, where my exotic touchscreen rarely was supported, here all devices work out of the box wrapped through the Windows drivers. My Proxmox and Docker managers, and my Nextcloud and a few other Apps that usually run on the phone only. Pulseway, to keep my servers under supervision (the android app is far cooler that the windows or browser version) I’m talking about my FeedMe (to read my self-hosted RSS feeds). I want to run some Android Apps on that, because they run nicer than any Windows alternatives. I probably can document that stunt later, since It’s an old Atom CPU Tablet. And I can tell you that runs fast and is really cool if you require that.īefore I start and if you wonder on the why? (otherwise, skip to the next section)Ģ) I have a quiet old Windows Tablet which I recently upgraded to Windows 11. However, Windows 11 is going to introduce on top of it a new “Windows Subsystem for Android” which allows you to install and run Android apps under Windows “natively” without the need of some additional Emulator. More on how to enable it at the very bottom. That of course is going to be also in Windows 11. You might have heard that since Windows 10 we have the “Windows Subsystem for Linux” (Ubuntu). Some time has passed since my last post, but I have something new I’d like to share, as long it’s new and fresh.
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