I have a really nice touch-screen Chromebook that is Android Play Store enabled... that is, I can install and run just about anything on the Google Play Store on my Chromebook. I have had really good luck with this setup until installing the Studio One Remote app.
It will not recognize Studio One - that is, the DAW does not show up in the list on startup. It works great from my Samsung Galaxy S5 (a much older device even) but the screen is just too small to make it worth using except for basic mixing. Has anyone else run across this and found a solution? |
Do Chromebooks have any kind of firewall or antivirus? There may be something blocking your access to SO.
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I am running this Chromebook as a dual-boot system with Linux. I think I will try the app with an Andriod emulator on the Linux side.
It would still be nice to run it on the ChromeOS side though. I opened a support ticket so we will see where it goes. In the meantime I will try the Linux solution and dig into the firewall side of ChromeOS - I suspect that is the issue as Google locks these things down super-tight. |
I think what is going on is Chrome books have a virtual network for apps and this causes teh S1 RC not to see S1 on the pc even though it is on the same network.
My Network is a 192.168.x.x set up. when I run a network app on my chrome book it reports a network IP of 110.*.*.* My S10 and ipad both work, so it's not android or windows. I must be Crhomebook |
It may have something to do with the particular chromebook you are using (the processor). My remote app works great on my 2 chromebooks and I have it permanently setup to an old Android Fire 10" tablet that I tricked up a bit. I would bail on the remote app if I could only get my usb96 to behave as well My chromebooks are HP....both with Intel processors.
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I'm glad this is working now for you guys!
FWIW, it was an issue in the Chrome OS not with PreSonus... Chrome OS completely "sandboxed" any WiFi traffic that was not going out or coming in from the the Internet - the main reason they were so secure. They probably needed to open that up when they opened Chromebooks up to native Linux which would explain why it works now. My Chromebook finally died on me last month and while I absolutely loved it, I went ahead with a nice Dell 2-in-1 Windows 10 laptop to replace it. I haven't gone through the exercise of load the Remote app on it yet though... someday when I really need it. For now, I have my Atom to do remote transport features and that's all I would really use it for. |
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