

So your free messaging suddenly comes at a cost. Well, while they all may be free to download and use, if you’re not connected to Wi-fi, your phone is using up data. You got your Facebook and your Twitter and your Snapchat. You love to have all your social media apps open and going. There are a couple reasons you might want to run an emulator.

Is your head spinning yet? Yeah, mine, too. Your computer will emulate or mimic the environment in which the app can run.

An emulator would allow those apps to run on your personal computer. So, your apps are generally designed to run only on mobile devices. They sit down to a candle-lit dinner and, through an emulator, the host can run software designed for the guest. One system is the host, the other the guest. Home computers are being called upon to perform many new functions, including the consumption of homework formerly eaten by the dog.– Doug Larson Kik on PC: What is an emulator?Īn emulator is hardware or a software program that allows one computing system to run like another. In the words of Vanilla Ice, “Let’s kick it.” (The nineties references are just flowing freely today, aren’t they?) We’ll explain what an emulator does and why you might want to consider using one, as well as introduce you to a few different options, and take you through a step-by-step process of downloading and running Kik on your PC. Today, we’ll take you through the process of downloading, installing, and running Kik Messenger on your PC. When we’re not watching the incomparable Molly Shannon and the mid to late nineties, early aughts casts of SNL, we’re over here bringing you all-things-apps.

If you don’t get that reference, go back to school. In fact, you like to kick, stretch, and kick. You love kickin’ it with your friends on Kik.
