Re read your initial message. So your points was 1. finger friendly, 2.
performance and 3. desktop development stack
With 1. and 2. i think Mini is best choice, as it was initially developed
for old Windows Mobile devices, have several options to optimize rendering.
As for 3. i m not sure what yo
пн, 8 нояб. 2021 г., 00:49 Greg Hellings :
>
> Hmm, for some reason I thought Bible Time Mini had gotten folded into the
> main line BT repo back in the day. Bummer. Wonder how tough it would be to
> get it going with modern Sword and BT code.
>
Hi, all! It was Bible Time Mobile, that went togeth
As far as I know there's still no current mobile linux sword app available.
The desktop ones run, but are mostly unusable unless the phone is docked. A
fellow PinePhone user wrote a bible app for the PinePhone but he doesn't
use sword. I contacted him about maybe adding sword support, but he said a
qpsword was written for OPIE, which was basically linux ported to HP
PDAs years ago. It uses Qt. It probably still calls a bunch of
deprecated API methods, but should be easy to update.
https://crosswire.org/qpsword/index.jsp?section=Screenshots
https://crosswire.org/qpsword
svn co https://
The best thing i can think of that's already in distros is Calibre,
specifically the ebook viewer. It needs epubs though, not Sword modules,
and navigating bibles in epub format is tricky when they're made by
standard conversion. Epub Bibles need backlinks to the book title on all
the chapter brea
Anbox and Waydroid are both possible on the Pine Phone, but Anbox
especially folks say is very slow because of the virtualization on the
hardware. Waydroid is better because it seems to use more of Container
space. In both cases people say the Pine Phone Pro is fantastic in
performance with them. B
I recently tried to run And Bible on anbox, but anbox is too old for
current version of And Bible (it's actually webview that is too old and
can't update it).
With my searching I think I saw people running waydroid on pine phone.
Waydroid has much more up-to-date Android versions available. But wa
Bibletime mini is/was a separate initiative to make an android version
similar to bibletime. As far as I know it's completely separate from
Bibletime and largely inactive. It shows available for Android 2.3, last
release was 5 years ago. but while the interface is designed for touch on
small scree
For my phone I've been moving to my new Pine Phone. For those unaware, this
is a cell phone that runs mainline Linux and most of the popular desktop
distributions are available on it - Arch, Fedora, Ubuntu, Manjaro, and
about a dozen others I don't recall off the top of my head. I'm personally
driv