ted6
lvl.2
United States
Offline
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I was over on the Google Play Store looking at the DJI Fly reviews. Has a dismal 1.7 rating, but if you spend some time going through the 1700 reviews, a huge number of the 1 star reviews are from customers that have a Samsung 10 that was upgraded to Android 10.0. This upgrade breaks Fly. So DJI has a big problem here. Not sure why they are taking so long to respond. If you take away the mad S10 owners, the star rating would probably jump up a couple points!
As far as the 32/64 thing goes, I come from a Microsoft ecosystem where the 32 and 64 bitness is out in the open so to speak. In android, it seems hidden. I scoured my S2 to find out if the OS is 64 bit, and I could not find this info anywhere! I knew the CPU is 64 bit. Ended up downloading a nice little app from Google Play called "64 bit checker". Kinda funny, the app just has a big button that says "CHECK", and you click it and it tells you! Anyway the S2 is 64 bit OS on 64 bit processor.
As a Windows software developer, I use their development tools, and going from 32 to 64 bit builds (and back) is really quite easy if your software is written correctly. It's literally as easy as a combo box selection! If you are porting a 32 bit app you will probably get a few errors that the compiler will flag, but again, if the software is written correctly the errors are easily fixed. From that point on, software changes can be made, and 32 and 64 bit builds can be made seamlessly. Of course, you have to duplicate all your software validation twice. This is why I am so perplexed about all the 32/64 bit mystery in Android land. "Is this 32 bit and that 64, who knows, how can I find out, etc etc" Sheesh. |
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