![]() This was really frustrating as the emulator was both quick (relative to the out of the box emulators from Google – historically) and didn’t require another emulator sub-system (as it worked on Hyper-V). Unfortunately, Microsoft have indicated that the emulator is no longer going to receive updates, so anyone wanting to dev/test on more recent builds of Android are out of luck. ![]() A while ago, in response to a common frustration from Xamarin developers, Microsoft released the Visual Studio Emulator for Android and it even made it into the Visual Studio installer:Īs a long-serving Windows Phone developer I embraced this decision as the emulator was based on Hyper-V which meant that it played nicely with the Windows Phone emulators – I could now do cross platform development, even when I didn’t have real devices with me.
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