Is the license mentioned in this blog post <a href="http://www.touchqode.com/blog/009_analytics_and_licence_explained.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.touchqode.com/blog/009_analytics_and_licence_expl...</a> available on the website anywhere?<p>If there are any onerous terms, I'd like to know what they are prior to installation.
If I could get Xcode running on an iPad, I wouldn't need my laptop any longer.<p>So while this might not be quite self-hosting just yet, I think it's a really cool idea for the future. Some day we'll get there.
The website advertises code suggestion and some other features, but the demo video just shows something that any text editor application could do. I think you might want to revisit it.
Just a quick comment after playing with this. I like it. The team doesn't seem to have any delusions about this being a primary code editor but it's good for those quick fixes and ideas. As such I went through the process of grabbing a source file off a client's site, making a couple quick changes, and pushing it back up. While I wouldn't want to do it all day it was far less painful than that process has the right to be on a mobile phone. It's a keeper for me.
Seems like a cool idea, interesting to see an app come out on Android first (probably good for the target market).<p>But I took one look at the synchronization setup <a href="http://www.touchqode.com/faq.htm#synchro" rel="nofollow">http://www.touchqode.com/faq.htm#synchro</a> and decided that it wasn't worth it to muck around with code on my phone. Perhaps if I had a tablet I'd put more effort into it, but would be great to see this simplified a bit!