It's not that easy you know....building the OS is easy, but to make its own store and ask developers to make games/softwares using their platform rquires looot of investment
because mobile phones have custom internals that's why you won't see multi operating systems installed by default since android is a Linux derivative you can even run Linux on even lover devices that the given one i run full blown Linux within android through a method similar to wsl 2 anyway it is easier to install Linux on a phone since all drivers already exist in Linux, windows indeed exist. for arm soc but for desktop derivatives that why in order to run/ install windows on a mobile phone you need to compile the efi firmware in an open standard in order that windows can boot on it
thank you *very* much - that was really cool to see. I am a longtime OnePlus user, who's occasionally rooted their OnePlus (1 and 5T) to run Debian through the Linux Deploy App. But that was in the time before ARM was that popular with Windows or Linux, so many programmes didn't run very well. Particularly code editors. Will be great to see what you install these days, now ARM sees greater support from programmes.
Hey Don, what are the chances that WoA would work with Tablets? I think we have lots of such devices and this is definitely an interesting application.
@@donghyunshin21 Wine64 running under Box64 does work, I've tried. But it loses a lot of performance because it needs to emulate the Wine libraries. If it could wrap Wine libraries like it does for the system libraries, Box64 would work much faster.
This is awesome. I still have my Opo6, can't believe how powerful phones have become in the last 10years been able to play Crysis and Tomb Raider. I imagine in next 3 to 5 years time we will probably have console like games being to run in mobile form
How about to put full functioning linux on these devices and use is as low powered server with full docker support? I know android is a linux, but it's totally different from desktop/server linux
Some Android phones can connect to a big screen using USB-C to DP/HDMI, I wonder if that works with windows 11. you might have a full fledged computer in your hand in that case.
@@ilya_mzp you can use mhl to hdmi adapter for that to work. Even with usb 3.0, it can't operate the feature cause the driver is completely different on android
Fun! :) I have been playing with Windows 10 on Lumia 950XL for fun as well (PI4 WOR also), would be fun to try on an Android phone as well. I will go check the list of phones now :)) Oops, renegade website down?
This why I have huge hope for Linux phone in the long term to be great convergent device windows I'm no sure if they will try convergent device with their main os ...
I have a OnePlus 6T but I had upgraded to Android 11 and from all the info I could find, TWRP doesn't work on it anymore. I can only get lineage to work and I don't see anyway to get that to work for me... :(
@@Pygar2 Windows CE is so archaic that it just cannot run on modern hardware without emulation. No modern app, API or framework would be even capable to work on it. Linux and Windows NT is were we're at
let's say you have this phone, and also dex on another one, plugged into a monitor. theoretically you can carry two phones (which a lot of people do), and use one to remote access the other. So you basically have an accessible pc on your pocket
Thank you very much for the hope you instill in us that it is possible to install Windows 11 on the SmartPhone, so I have a Galaxy Fold4 and I would like to install a Windows 11 system on it, I would appreciate a link to a very detailed tutorial on how to do this in practice in a clear way, thanks in advance, I would appreciate it if you even send me an email and links on the subject as soon as possible.
No It's Chrome. it's using a lot of ram, you know that , right ? Using another browser then maybe, but not chrome I will recommend a Minimum 8 GB of ram if you want to use chrome by the way
Unfortunately, this is a community driven project, so it takes time to support newer hardware. The list of supported devices is pretty slim at the moment.
Samsung mobile devices are impossible to do windows dev, not only does the UFS chip wipe immediately on windows boot leaving you bricked permanently Samsung modifies their hardware down to even PMICs, good luck writing custom drivers The only android tablet known to work with renegade is the Xiaomi pad 5
If you want a tablet running windows, you can have it natively on the Huawei Matebook E/Matebook E Go, Xiaomi Book S, Vivobook 13 Slate, HP Tablet 11. And ofc, Microsoft surface pro lineup. The Matebook E was my pick and it is so good with its OLED screen.
Dude, I gotta say, you got some mad skills! And you don’t present things like “look at me and my mad skills, yo!” Not much impresses me anymore. Just too old. Seeing those frame rates in those games was just awesome. Makes me want to dust off my old junk and see what I can do with it again.
Mad skills? He didn't do shit. The whole dedication from porting the uefi/drivers/making guides, etc goes to renegade-project. He just followed a shitty guide that's not even official. Not to mention that he didn't shoutout this project, seeming like he did all the work.
this will definitely be the future of Windows. they make the OS more and more touch friendly, the centered task bar, tablet mode... Microsoft is definitely working on getting Windows to be phone ready as soon as possible and they will try to sell Windows phones again. Windows 11 having a built-in Android emulator will also help. with that you'll have most of your favourite apps available without any need to port the app over. running on ARM will definitely also help with Android app emulation. so if they manage to make a full Windows 11 work on a phone, with easy to use support for Android apps, and easy to use docking methods to use it as a full PC on a Monitor, they will have a possibly game changing OS in their hands
@@brigda3898 actually, u are wrong, most devices don't have support for external displays via usb c, to get display output working you'll most likely need a display link cable
If you are talking about rooting your phone It should work on any device as long as the bootloader can be unlocked. If you are talking about installing windows 10/11 then no only devices that have project renegade can do it.
@@Austinredstoner games on Linux is pretty much normal now a days. using lutris and steam gaming is possible. i am talking about security. windows have security issues their file-system sucks!!!
@@securelinuxchannel1519 ok you are right steam is on Linux but most games on steam don't work on Linux and only on windows, for lutris I have never heard of lutris.