Re: Is there an online compiler?
Posted: 18 Oct 2017, 05:33
If performance is not an issue, you could use an emulator. QEMU probably being the most popular one on Linux for x86 emulation.
But expect extremely terrible performance. Several hours for the boot wouldn't surprise me at all.
For a translation layer, well on the one side we have the ZenFone which, thanks to its CPU, can translate ARM instructions to x64 instructions without major performance issues.
And software-wise I'm only aware of Wine which can translate Win32 functionality to its Linux equivalents, but only for the same architecture.
About your "solutions":
- Parallels just seems to a a remote access application, similar to OpenVNC or TeamViewer.
- CrossOver on Android seems to heavily rely on Intel's ARM to x64 translation magic and thus would only work on the ZenFone and some ChromeBooks apparently.
But expect extremely terrible performance. Several hours for the boot wouldn't surprise me at all.
For a translation layer, well on the one side we have the ZenFone which, thanks to its CPU, can translate ARM instructions to x64 instructions without major performance issues.
And software-wise I'm only aware of Wine which can translate Win32 functionality to its Linux equivalents, but only for the same architecture.
About your "solutions":
- Parallels just seems to a a remote access application, similar to OpenVNC or TeamViewer.
- CrossOver on Android seems to heavily rely on Intel's ARM to x64 translation magic and thus would only work on the ZenFone and some ChromeBooks apparently.