"Use a real device" is a good answer, especially when it comes to Honeycomb
as the market stands today.  It will likely fragment some over time but I
highly doubt it will turn into what the phone market has.

Frankly, I'd rather pay $400 for a tablet than even fire up the emulator
once. If you expect to release your app and support the platform in a
first-class way, you'll need one eventually anyway.

Chris Stewart
http://locomolabs.com
On Jun 11, 2011 1:40 PM, "Glenn Maynard" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Saying "use a real device" isn't very helpful or realistic. Android
> apps need to be tested in many screen configurations and in every
> supported SDK level. If the cost of entry to Android development is
> thousands of dollars of test devices, that's just too high.
>
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