Android Studio vs Teleconsole: What are the differences?
Android Studio: Android development environment based on IntelliJ IDEA. Android Studio is a new Android development environment based on IntelliJ IDEA. It provides new features and improvements over Eclipse ADT and will be the official Android IDE once it's ready; Teleconsole: Share your UNIX terminal in seconds. Teleconsole is a free service to share your terminal session with people you trust. Your friends can join via a command line using SSH or by using their browser. Use it when two parties are separated by NAT and you cannot connect via SSH directly.
Android Studio belongs to "Integrated Development Environment" category of the tech stack, while Teleconsole can be primarily classified under "localhost Tools".
Some of the features offered by Android Studio are:
- Flexible Gradle-based build system.
- Build variants and multiple APK generation.
- Expanded template support for Google Services and various device types.
On the other hand, Teleconsole provides the following key features:
- Forwarding local TCP ports - how to let joining parties access TCP ports on your localhost.
- Using Secure Sessions - how to invite specific people, like Github users or owners of a specific public SSH key.
- Private Proxies - how to set up your own proxy servers without having to rely on https://teleconsole.com.
Teleconsole is an open source tool with 2.29K GitHub stars and 96 GitHub forks. Here's a link to Teleconsole's open source repository on GitHub.