L. - Actually, we've gotten Andmore to work. We can successfully build for three targets: an APK for deployment on a real device, testing with the Google simulator and testing with the Genymotion simulator.
However, it's been pretty much a guessing game as to how things fit together, particularly for our group which hasn't done much prior Android development. How-to tutorials would be wonderful, as would a responsive place for dumb user questions (I have no preference - email list, forum, Stack Overflow, Reddit, whatever would be fine).
H - I agree with your sentiments about AndroidStudio/IntelliJ IDEA for several reasons (not the least of which is that it is Swing-based). And I'm also not a fan of GitHub as it forces you to use Git which I am less than enamored with (we use all of the big three in various roles: Subversion, Mercurial and Git).
Don Wills
I love Eclipse, and find AndroidStudio / IntelliJ very cumbersome to use. So I say this out of love for the platform (and I think I said this before, so forgive me for repeating the same, but):
The Eclipse.org development model is very old-fashioned and difficult to rally with. Mailing lists? Bugzilla? We need something like github / gitlab, where issues can be filed easily, cross-referenced in commits, PRs and reviews. This is mainly for the developers, but it also helps users to see all that action and get involved.
Also, there are a lot of Android and Java developers on reddit. There's /r/java, /r/eclipse and /r/androiddev, but nobody to speak up there. Ok /r/java is active but very biased towards IntelliJ. Perhaps we could create a subreddit for andmore, or be active on /r/eclipse, /r/androiddev?
-H
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