NO, there is no way to override it. From the documentation:
When the system is installing an update to an application, it compares the certificate(s) in the new version with those in the existing version. If the certificates match exactly, including both the certificate data and order, then the system allows the update.
One way to work around this will be to try to sign the apps on both machines with the same keystore. If you are using Eclipse,
- Go to Preferences -> Android -> Build
There you should find the path to the 'Default debug keystore'. (usually something like /Users/username/.android/debug.keystore.
- Copy this file to the new machine.
- Inside Eclipse on the new machine, open Preferences -> Android -> Build
- Enter the path to the file in the field 'Custom debug keystore'
- Save and then you can run your app and have it signed with the same key.
Good luck
UPDATE:
It is now possible to configure your signing key in Gradle (which will be used by Android Studio) and include your debug key in source control. Just add the key to your project folder and then add the following to your build.gradle file:
signingConfigs {
debug {
storeFile file("../debug.keystore")
}
}
And also add this under build types:
buildTypes {
debug {
debuggable true
signingConfig signingConfigs.debug
}
}
See the documentation for more details