It considerably accelerates the development on Android, it is just a shame that it doesn’t works like this out of the box. The VM will boot up in just a few seconds anyway. When you create a new AVD to use this latest system image and enable the GPU support on it (at the moment the snapshot support are not compatible with GPU but it still worths it. Now it is possible to run the emulator at native speeds on a Mac but there is some work to do by hand.įirst you need the latest SDK Tools rev.19+ and Platform tools rev.11+, the Android x86 Atom System Image for 4.0.3 to 4.4 and the Intel Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager (HAX) all this from the Android SDK Manager.Īfter this you need to install HAX, unfortunately the SDK Manager downloads an outdated version. On the latest version of the Android SDK there is support for x86 and native execution. I’m using a Macbook Pro 2010 on Mac OS X Lion. I placed in more ‘RAM’ into the virtual device but nothing changes. First of all, yes I know there’s a lot of topics similar to this issue, I did use the search function on stack overflow.īut most of the issue that were brought up seems to about long boot times.įor me, the emulator is so slow, simply sliding from one home screen to another is like watching a slideshow.