http://liliputing.com/2016/09/android-x86-releases-early-build-nougat-desktop...
Google and Intel may not be doing much work to make sure that Android can run on devices with Intel processors anymore… but the Android-x86 project continues to release new builds of Android for computers with Intel and AMD chips.
The software is based on Google’s Android Open Source Project (AOSP) code, and it’s still a work in progress. But some of Nougat’s key features, such as split-screen, multi-window mode works, allowing you to interact with two apps on the screen at once.
Both Intel and Google have dropped all efforts to run Android on those funky Microsoft'd current generation Intel chipsets. Instead, relatively new, powerful Media Tek processors and Qualcomm processors are filling these niches instead. The Open Source x86 Project and several of the Android as a laptop groups have stepped forward to fill the "low end laptop" gap using repurposed older Intel processors.
"Phone on a PC" hits the back burner at Google, especially seeing that Continuum was a really big flop at Wintel with NOBODY buying their whuppie super duper Win 10 PC phones -- at all.
Nobody wanted them.
The Andromium Superbook Project (Android phones driving a laptop dock) sold out 3x over however, and is in actual real public "sell it as a product" mode in Asia as we speak.
http://www.xda-developers.com/andromiums-99-superbook-converts-your-android-s...Jide as Android Laptops are doing well also. Asia likes the idea of "Phone as a PC" and the idea of "Android Laptops".
So, these may be viable Asian niche products that will be filled by a few small Asian companies, until it takes off on its own in some major fashion with one of the major Asian phone suppliers as a "standard feature" backed up with a stock docking station. Then it might have some impact in America.
Google will continue to build the abilities into the Nougat and into later OS's so anyone can do it, so perhaps indeed someone in Asia will continue to do it with Android.
That is the Google Alphabet way now,
support a good disruptive idea for a bit then let it float or sink on its own merit.As a "recession product" it makes sense though, so I kinda doubt it will die out on us .....