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Build a Runtime-Enabled SDK
AI Summary
This technical video explains how to build a runtime-enabled SDK for Android's Privacy Sandbox. Viewers will learn about project structure setup, declaring public APIs with annotations, and connecting entry points. Rich in specialized vocabulary around mobile development, privacy, and software architecture, it is ideal for learners who want to improve their technical English in the Android development domain.
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Subtitles (58 segments)
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- Do you use third-party codes to enhance your apps?
What if there was a way to increase privacy and security for apps, SDKs, and users, benefiting the entire Android ecosystem?
Hi, I'm Zoe, and I'm a developer relations engineer on the Privacy Sandbox team.
In this video, you'll learn how to build an SDK that's compatible with the SDK Runtime, covering everything from project setup to defining its public API.
The SDK Runtime is a new technology in Android 14 with backward compatibility through Jetpack.
It's designed to build trust by isolating third-party code in a secure environment, a sandbox.
SDKs running inside the sandbox are called runtime-enabled SDKs or RE SDKs for short.
SDK developers can choose to build a translation SDK to help apps with migration.
These SDKs, which are aware of the SDK runtime and interact with it, are called runtime-aware or RA SDKs.
The shim or shim generation tools help bridge the gap between RE SDKs and apps or runtime-aware SDKs.
Finally, RE SDKs are distributed as Android SDK bundles or ASBs.
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Key Vocabulary (24)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
To make something by putting parts or materials together over a period of time. This can refer to physical objects like houses or abstract concepts like trust and relationships.
A group of students who are taught together in a school or college. It also refers to a period of time during which students are taught a specific subject.
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