Thanks for sharing this. I also found it really unintuitive, but I managed to stumble upon it after an hour.
henfredemars
Yes, I think you're looking for lshal
but I don't know how well it works without root to inspect the underlying hardware. Those details are hidden from normal apps for security reasons.
Here's how you get a list of the implementations, but once again this is usually done in emulation in my experience, so not sure you can do it directly on a production device. You may need to do some hacking.
PackageManager.getInstalledPackages
returns a list of PackageInfo which includes activities exposed by the installed applications.
Note that you can't see all activities from the code because an app has to consent to this in principle by exporting activities first.
You can absolutely depend on a publicly traded corporation that’s legally obligated to make decisions in the monetary interest of its shareholders—to behave in an altruistic fashion for the benefit of mankind.
Why not simply imprison the customers until they empty their wallets?
When discussing truth, it seems pointless to give false a seat at the table, as if it is equally legitimate.
When you have truth and false, it’s just false.
My wife will go into our other bathroom to take the partially used roll there instead of getting a fresh one from the closet.
She said you know how stolen food tastes better? Same concept.
What about the elevator with the see-through doors that we have in the office? How does that work?
That’s like peeling the rind from the brie and just throwing it away.
An inspiration to crackheads everywhere.
I too enjoy outdated packages.
I jest, but more seriously, I think it's a balancing act.