[Q] Port Moto X Touchless Control? - Nexus 5 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hello, I have seen others post this, with the result of recommendations to use OpenMic+. However, it is not that great. Since the N5 has Snapdragon 800 with the low power core, is it possible for someone to port the true Moto Touchless Control over to the Nexus 5? Would anyone do it? I would if I had the knowledge to do it...

It's highly unlikely that anyone ever will. Your best bet will be custom roms that incorporate it

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Upcoming highend android device with xenon flash?

Hi, I was wondering if anyone know of any upcoming highend android devices with a builtin xenon flash? I am so sick of the lousy pictures you get with a LED flash, and the only xenon device I could find, is Motorola XT720, but compared to my current Nexus One, that seems like a downgrade.
Yeah I am also looking for this android beast
Moto Milestone is almost good for me except it has only measly 256mb ram. We gotta wait for update of this model @[email protected]

[Q] ow to Port Device Specific Applications to Other Devices?

Hey,
After playing around with the Xperia Arc system dump, I am interested in learning how to port some of the applications to other android devices. I thought maybe some of them would work on at least the X10, but apparently not.
I've seen success stories on people porting over the Droid X Multitouch keyboard to nearly every other android device.
I'm just wondering how this is done? Can anyone provide some insight/knowledge on the matter?
Thanks!
Wasn't sure whether to put this is the other section, or this one...so I guess I'll let the mods device

[Q] superchips vivid port?

I was wondering if there was anyone out there able to run superchips vivid paq on an Android smartphone. I would think its possible considering the device superchips uses is an archos device and most high end phones would be more than capable to run this software.
interested as well! any news?
Just saw it on tv, wow.

[Q] Best headphones(earbuds) with talk controls

What are the best headphones with talk controls that work with android phone specifically the lg revolution. Any help would be great!! Thanks!
Take a look here:
http://www.reghardware.com/2011/10/15/ten_in_ear_headphones_with_microphones/
Perhaps there's something suitable there?

[WIP] Hotword detection with screen off

Hello everyone,
This is a work in progress thread meant to gather info about how to add hotword detection support while the screen is off and the processor is in deep sleep. Ideally, this will work just like the Pixel devices by Google, so you'll be able to get to the assistant by saying "Ok Google" without turning on your device.
Let's start off with the first big question: Is the hardware that's required to do this in our devices?
Well, not every device. I have only looked into Qualcomm SoCs, but this is also possible with some Exynos processors through S Voice.
Qualcomm first added support for Hotword detection with the Snapdragon 800. The only device prior to that processor that had support for Hotwords was the first gen Moto X, which had its own Custom chip separate from the processor. However, my research indicates that all devices after the Snapdragon 800's launch use the processor's DSP for this job.
You can view the announcement of this feature for the Snapdragon 800 at this link:
https://www.qualcomm.com/news/onq/2...akes-mobile-world-snapdragon-voice-activation
In the blog post, the feature is mentioned as Qualcomm Voice Activation. I also found out that this was eventually also backported to the Snapdragon 600. However, looking elsewhere online reveals that this has other names as well, as it is part of Qualcomm Fluent PRO and All-Ways Aware. There are marketing videos for both online, and they all work with the Hey Snapdragon hotword. However, it seems that all of these features are part of the Hexagon DSP on the actual SoC and that they are compatible with v5 and up. So that means that technically all processors in the 600, 700 (in the future) and 800 line should be able to do this.
As far as I'm aware, the only device that uses the Hey Snapdragon wakeup command is the OnePlus One, which has a Snapdragon 801. On its default firmware, CyanogenMod 11S, you could go into the device's settings and train the device by saying Hey Snapdragon three times. Then, you could select the activity that would run every time you said it.
Someone on XDA updated this feature for newer firmware versions and looking at the flashable zip files it has one application file, a modified mediaserver, a modified audio library for its processor and some lib files for voice detection. I haven't attempted to Port this feature for any other device, but I doubt that it would work, even on devices with the same SoC.
I have also looked at Qualcomm's forums and found this thread which has a reply with links that could probably help us out here:
https://developer.qualcomm.com/foru...timedia-optimization-hexagon-sdk/speech/28153
This is source code from the Google Pixel and AOSP which might be the solution to making this work. I am not familiar with C and AOSP's code, so if someone with more experience could check this out, that would be great!
Lastly, I want to mention that I have a couple of devices that could help with testing including my daily driver Xiaomi Mi 5 (Snapdragon 820), a now retired LG G2 (Snapdragon 800) and a Galaxy S7 Exynos which should be able to use S Voice for this but I have not tested it yet. My friend @David_#27 also has a Redmi Note 4X (Snapdragon 625) and I could probably also borrow a Redmi 4X (Snapdragon 435) if we ever need it for testing.
Hopefully we can get some more info on this topic from people that have looked into this more than I have. Please reply to this topic with any info you may have, any help is very much appreciated! Making this work eventually on our devices would be incredible!
Thank you
Bump!
@chrismin13, think this thread is dead...
No one is taking our consideration for real!?
In my opinion it is kind of creepy having the device listen to every sound around it at all times. Many, MANY, exploits were released in 2016 and 2017 specifically based around bugs in mediaserver, and audioserver.
You said this might entail using "...a modified mediaserver, a modified audio library for its processor and some lib files for voice detection..."
So I don't know if I'd even want to mess around with that until maybe even 8.1
Delgoth said:
In my opinion it is kind of creepy having the device listen to every sound around it at all times. Many, MANY, exploits were released in 2016 and 2017 specifically based around bugs in mediaserver, and audioserver.
You said this might entail using "...a modified mediaserver, a modified audio library for its processor and some lib files for voice detection..."
So I don't know if I'd even want to mess around with that until maybe even 8.1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
True, there are significant security concerns. However, many other devices have also invaded our personal lives, with smart speakers especially becoming more popular lately. I agree, this is scary, but if I'm the one making the code for my device, then I'm more confident knowing what my device does. Also, this is more of an experiment rather than a long term solution. So it's up to you whether you want it or not. I'm willing to take the risk.

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