bridonca wrote:There is no Fongo app, nor is it likely there will be a Fongo app for windows mobile phones. I believe it is because there is too much programming work required, and not enough Windows Mobile devices out there to justify the expense.
bridonca wrote:The same problems remain though. You still would have to put in a lot of resources to make a compatible app, and Windows still has a poor showing when it comes to phones. That is why any VOIP application for Windows phone is few and far between.
Blackberry 10 apps in comparison are much more plentiful, even though they have a smaller market, and that is because it is easier to port native Android apps to it. Until Microsoft fixes that glaring problem, and miraculously gets a much higher market share, the apps are just not going to be there.
cometstream wrote:bridonca wrote:The same problems remain though. You still would have to put in a lot of resources to make a compatible app, and Windows still has a poor showing when it comes to phones. That is why any VOIP application for Windows phone is few and far between.
Blackberry 10 apps in comparison are much more plentiful, even though they have a smaller market, and that is because it is easier to port native Android apps to it. Until Microsoft fixes that glaring problem, and miraculously gets a much higher market share, the apps are just not going to be there.
Windows 10 is the answer you have been looking for. If you made an app for the Windows 10 desktop it will work with the Windows 10 Phone as well. As for making it compatible Microsoft has made that easy for you as well.
With over 110 million users on Windows 10 already I don't understand why you would not jump on the market first for Windows 10 Phone app. Just use the tools below and port the android code in to a Windows 10 app. If you are really worried about the cost give me the source code and I'll do it for you.
Bring your code to Windows
Wherever your code was born, you can bring it to Windows
https://dev.windows.com/en-us/bridges
bridonca wrote:cometstream wrote:bridonca wrote:The same problems remain though. You still would have to put in a lot of resources to make a compatible app, and Windows still has a poor showing when it comes to phones. That is why any VOIP application for Windows phone is few and far between.
Blackberry 10 apps in comparison are much more plentiful, even though they have a smaller market, and that is because it is easier to port native Android apps to it. Until Microsoft fixes that glaring problem, and miraculously gets a much higher market share, the apps are just not going to be there.
Windows 10 is the answer you have been looking for. If you made an app for the Windows 10 desktop it will work with the Windows 10 Phone as well. As for making it compatible Microsoft has made that easy for you as well.
With over 110 million users on Windows 10 already I don't understand why you would not jump on the market first for Windows 10 Phone app. Just use the tools below and port the android code in to a Windows 10 app. If you are really worried about the cost give me the source code and I'll do it for you.
Bring your code to Windows
Wherever your code was born, you can bring it to Windows
https://dev.windows.com/en-us/bridges
The problem is that the Fongo desktop client is not a stand alone program, it requires JAVA, which is not small, and not really suitable for a mobile device. Actually, it is horrid, it still has poor native codec support. So you got to pack that pile of bloat onto the Windows 10 OS to get the Fongo Windows desktop client to work. Try not to forget JAVA is not even close to optimized low power devices like smart phones.
It is Microsoft that is going to have to make the tools to make it easy to port over Android apps to Windows. So far nothing even close to that is coming from Microsoft.
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