Red Laser-Great for checking prices when out and about based on the bar code.
Ticket to Ride-My favorite board game to play on my phone.
Pandora-Streaming music
Waze-The best free GPS map with turn-by-turn directions, traffic, and cop warnings (speed traps)
Zombies, Run. Is a silly but awesome app. It takes exercising into a horror movie.
Square- Haven’t used it yet but it’s free including the attachment. This is an app that lets you take credit cards and deposits it to your bank account.
Your smartphone has a built-in GPS unit. You should definitely take advantage of that factoid somehow.
I’m going to suggest downloading (if it’s not already installed) Google Maps. It’s free, and lets you use your smartphone as a Garmin-like device for navigation purposes. Even if you only use it in emergency situations it’s a lot better than nothing.
This is definitely a specialty case here, but I’m a golfer and there are a number of free or low-cost apps that turn your smartphone (iPhone, android-based phone, or Windpws-7-based phone) into a golf GPS device. A standalone golf GPS device costs over $100, and probably more like $150. The app I use is called SkyDroid - available for a mere $1.99 on either the iPhone or Android platform.
I’ve got to confess that these days I play all of my Android-based games on my tablet rather than my smartphone - the screen’s a lot bigger.
-**Music:**Upload your music also the cloud and listen to it whereever you go or at least have it stored here for backup. Streaming music uses bandwidth from your data plan. So if you have a smaller data plan, best to limit your use of streaming music and video (like Pandora, Netflix and Hulu).
I just got an iPhone so I’m following this thread with interest.
I’m very fond of “Ticket to Ride” myself. Sporcle is a set of trivia quizes - a rotating selection of quizzes from the website.
If you use Ravelry by any chance, there’s a android app called Ravulous that lets you access the site.
Sky Map is an app where you point the phone’s camera anywhere in the night sky and it labels the stars in its field of vision. You could live without it, but its cool as hell.
TuneIn Radio - A great, free way to listen to music, sports and news from every corner of the earth, with over 60,000 radio stations and 2 million on-demand programs.
Bump - A very clever way to transfer photos, files, and contact info to others.
Tapatalk, so you can read the SDMB. The Amazon Appstore for Android, which has a free app every day (most are crap, though). Swype, the best keyboard for touchscreens.
[ol]
[li]The aforementioned Ticket To Ride. Couldn’t commute without it.[/li][li]GrubHub so I can order food on my way home.[/li][li]Facebook so I can microblog about the pointless minutia of my life away from home “Ordering GrubHub now! Won 6 straight games of T2R!”[/li][li]Shazam so I can figure out what song is playing[/li][li]WalkTracker Pro - recently started using this to track my exercise[/li][li]Zipcar - book cars, unlock the doors, extend reservations, etc[/li][li]Catch The Bus - shows me when the next bus arrives at my fave bus stops. Helps me decide whether to take the bus or the train.[/li][li]IM+ so I can pester my staff while I am out of the office[/li][li]iSSH so I can reboot stuff[/li][li]App for my local bank so I can check balances, transfer money to my secret Swiss bank accounts, etc[/li][li]MyMaps lets me interact with my personal Google Maps[/li][/ol]
Listmaster, make lists, to-do’s and reminders Amazon Price Check, easy barcode scanning to look up on Amazon Hipmunk, the most user-friendly mobile airfare app I’ve used Guitar Toolkit, tuner, chord lookups and other useful guitar stuff Turntable, streaming music DJ’d by other users
One of my good college buddies is one of the developers for that!
Pretty much everything I would have mentioned already has been, though I’ll say that I do NOT recommend the Facebook app. Every update they do seems to make it slower, more cumbersome, and overall just worse.
As an alternative, I just use the mobile version of their site (just go to Facebook.com on your phone’s web browser and it will auto-redirect to the mobile site.)
And speaking of web browsers, the default is crummy. I recommend either Dolphin HD or FireFox Beta (when you search in Google Play, make sure to get the one that says Beta. It’s the newer one with cooler features, though yes, it’s not finished so you may get bugs, but I haven’t.) The best part about Firefox is it can Sync with your desktop one, so you can have all your bookmarks, saved passwords, and even synced tabs if you want. The mobile version of Chrome does the same thing if you us that on your desktop.
Thanks for so many excellent ideas, first chance I’ve had to check back. This particular phone uses the WINDOWS® PHONE OPERATING SYSTEM, not the Android system. I checked a few of the apps you all have listed and most of them seem to work with either software.