yeah, i'll keep that in mind when my contract is up in two years and writing amiibo .bins is still the first thing on my mindJust get an Android phone lol.
They are cheaper and better then iPhones.
There was a project at one point that was aimed at installing Android to dual boot on an iPhone, I think it was called "iBootDroid" or something like that. I don't know if it's still active but you could do some digging and find outThe thing is, I already have an iPhone 6, and I don't plan spending $200+ just to make amiibos. Unless I find a good deal on an Android phone, I don't plan on purchasing once.
I'd recommend this for people in the UK:Here is one of the many Android phones that I have the work great with TagMO for Amiibo's as well as the Amiiqo App.
still wouldn't make the iphone's nfc chip magically start working like the android's. the hardware itself is locked down to what apple wantsThere was a project at one point that was aimed at installing Android to dual boot on an iPhone, I think it was called "iBootDroid" or something like that. I don't know if it's still active but you could do some digging and find out
I guess I don't know how well or poorly hardware is accessed through iBootDroid, but it's obviously at least enough for all the essential things to work and the last few recent iPhones have NFC capabilitystill wouldn't make the iphone's nfc chip magically start working like the android's. the hardware itself is locked down to what apple wants
good thing i have a friend with a galaxy s6.
With Windows Phone 10, maybe yes but, unfortunately, Project Astoria (to install apk on WP10) was closedWhat about windows phones?
most of the 888bytes found on NTAG215 listings are probabjly just mistakes the NTAG216 has 888bytes while the NTAG215 has 504, so either the listing is wrong and its a NTAG216 for sale or the specs are wrong and it has 504 writable bytes and is a NTAG215, but it seems in most cases the seller has just grabbed the NTAG21x specs which lists the maximum specs in the NTAG21x range which is those of the 216Let's say I get an NFC tag that's a 215 and has 888 bytes.
Can I lock down these extra bytes to 512 using an app or anything? Lots of these sellers on aliexpress are selling a wide and crazy range of tags, and I can't see one that has 512, yet alone not having to buy like 100 of the tags.
Hello, i can get a Samsung galaxy young is it ok for this since he have an nfc chip.
Thank you
all NTAG215 are the same if i understand correctly the 504 writable byte limit is basically that the rest is the unique tagID which makes it up to 540bytes, which is why amiibo dumps are 540 bytes as the unique tag ID was dumped too, 504 is the actual real size without the uniqueID stuffYes, any android phones with NFC work.
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@gamesquest1 So I should still be able to fit data on a 504 byte ntag?