Progress Report of December 14, 2012 | Part Two of Three
Software Sampler of Mobile Application Development Using MIT App Inventor for Android
Here are some mobile apps developed by student pioneers and others using MIT App Inventor for Android through the Computer Science curriculum at the University of San Francisco. Professor David Wolber has taught the CS107 course there, “Computing, Mobile Apps, and the Web” and is the author of the book, App Inventor: Create Your Own Android Apps, along with other team members of the App Inventor project: MIT Professor Hal Abelson, Ellen Spertus and Liz Looney. In the past, these mobile apps developed by his students, via their coursework, have been reported on in articles in the New York Times and San Francisco Chronicle, Wired magazine, at TechCrunch.com and Fortune.CNN.com, and on Yahoo news.
Sources: http://www.appinventor.org and http://appinventorblog.com/
President's Quiz
With President's Quiz, you get a step-by-step series of questions, clicking the Next button takes you to the next question. After you enter your answer for each question, the app will report whether each answer is correct or not. Source: http://www.appinventor.org/quiz
ShooterGame
Create a 2-D arcade game called "ShooterGame" for shooting targets -- that is, some flying iPhones... Source: http://www.appinventor.org/shootergame
NoteTaker
Using NoteTaker, you can take notes on your Android smartphone. This could be the app for all that reading you (need to) do.
Source: http://www.appinventor.org/notetaker
Stock Market
Use this sampler to make an app that can display the current price of a public stock offering. Source: http://www.appinventor.org/stockmarket
Software Sampler of Mobile Application Development Using MIT App Inventor for Android
Here are some mobile apps developed by student pioneers and others using MIT App Inventor for Android through the Computer Science curriculum at the University of San Francisco. Professor David Wolber has taught the CS107 course there, “Computing, Mobile Apps, and the Web” and is the author of the book, App Inventor: Create Your Own Android Apps, along with other team members of the App Inventor project: MIT Professor Hal Abelson, Ellen Spertus and Liz Looney. In the past, these mobile apps developed by his students, via their coursework, have been reported on in articles in the New York Times and San Francisco Chronicle, Wired magazine, at TechCrunch.com and Fortune.CNN.com, and on Yahoo news.
Sources: http://www.appinventor.org and http://appinventorblog.com/
President's Quiz
With President's Quiz, you get a step-by-step series of questions, clicking the Next button takes you to the next question. After you enter your answer for each question, the app will report whether each answer is correct or not. Source: http://www.appinventor.org/quiz
ShooterGame
Create a 2-D arcade game called "ShooterGame" for shooting targets -- that is, some flying iPhones... Source: http://www.appinventor.org/shootergame
NoteTaker
Using NoteTaker, you can take notes on your Android smartphone. This could be the app for all that reading you (need to) do.
Source: http://www.appinventor.org/notetaker
Stock Market
Use this sampler to make an app that can display the current price of a public stock offering. Source: http://www.appinventor.org/stockmarket