I am late into the smart-phone game, but finally got an Android phone (Samsung Infuse) as part of family X-mas gift (err... that's 5 phones for the family including one for my 13-year old, all "free" except for that minor detail of monthly bill for 24-months to be paid by the old man = me I'm sad to say).
So now the question of this thread is of interest to me: what kinds of cool stuff (engineering calcs) can I do with this new toy ?
I could not read the link of the 5 ASME Apps even after cutting/pasting. Can anyone list the 5 Apps here?
I remember the free Mathcad-like program "smath" is supposed to work with handheld devices. I was disappointed to read on their forum that Android is not among those (I don't think iPhone is either but you might want to double-check if you have one of those) and development of smath for Android is "paused".
I am also interested in spreadsheets. I tried the Quicksheet that came pre-loaded. It was clearly not suitable to programming. The odd thing is that if you enter a formula you find yourself in a keypad entry screen with absolutely no way to "point" to other cells to make them part of your formula. (I guess you could type in the cell address, but that seems silly to me). I guess if there's a way to get spreadsheets from PC into smartphone, it would make a lot of sense to use spreadsheets developed on pc and transferred to smartphone, rather than developing them on the smartphone. I'll be fiddling around with my Android to see if there is a way to do that....I'm still a newbiew in handling files on this thing (In meantime, does anyone know if Quicksheet reads normal xls files?).
There is one App that wasn't mentioned in this thread that should be of interest to some engineers particularly the older ones. Droid48 = free program for Androids to emulate HP48 handheld calculators. I spent a lot of time using and programming with HP41CV many years ago.... not all by choice... partially due to instructors who I'm convinced had a bit of a sadistic streak in requiring us to do repetitive numeric calcs by handheld calculator which were much better suited to PC's already available at that time. But there is some good that came out of that traumatic experience after all.... the HP48 syntax seems identical (for my purposes) to the HP41CV syntax that was beaten into my memory. Also, there are free manuals for the HP48 that can be downloaded on-line, and many many free programs and libraries available on-line. And writing programs yourself is pretty easy if you've already used one of those calculators. How to transfer programs between PC and Android is again something I'm not sure about yet.
I have to admit though, it's somewhat weird and ironic that I am considering it a useful tool to be able to use a 1.6 Ghz 16GB 2011 device to emulate a 128k ram, late 80's device.
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(2B)+(2B)' ?