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December 1, 2008 2:41 PM PST

Five financial Android apps to regulate your dough

by Jessica Dolcourt
Android alien

With the economy in continuing decline, keeping tight control over your money is no longer just for obsessives. These financial apps for Google Android help you count every penny.

Personal Budget Droid is a simple budget- and bills-tracker that lets you create multiple monthly budgets for groceries, housing costs, and so on. You enter every budget name and transaction by hand, but the app keeps a transaction history and calculates how much you have left for each category.

The more sophisticated FireWallet works with budgets inside various accounts and protects your information behind a four-digit pin you change from the all-zero default. It's a bit trickier to navigate, but also shoehorns in more options. In addition to a more refined interface, FireWallet has graphs and charts to help visualize your spending, and a rudimentary tool to alert you of upcoming bills. Both it and Personal Budget Droid are missing templates and more powerful features to optionally suck in real-time data from your checking, savings, and stock portfolios. Time for a mobile version of Mint?

TouchTip for Android

Flick to either side for a calc that rounds up; up or down gets you a breakdown of numbers to pass around.

(Credit: TouchTip)

TouchTip is our current favorite tip calculator for Google Android. Flick a finger left or right to slide between a simple tip calculator that rounds up to the nearest dollar or ten dollars, and one featuring a ten-digit keypad. Both views use the bill total, tax, and number of diners to calculate your total payment. Flicking up or down produces a breakdown of what you owe that you can pass around the table to friends.

Personal Tip Jar hails from the same developer as Personal Budget Droid, and shares a few visual characteristics, including a useless "news" tab. Yet Tip Jar is a great niche nod to those whose incomes are built substantially on tips. While a fuller budgeting app could easily accommodate gains from tipping, this application provides a daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly summary at a glance.

Stock apps on Android are extremely mediocre, but the simply named Stock App is better than other skeletal tickers. This one opens with Dow, Nasdaq, S&P 500, Yahoo, and Google presets. You can add your own by pressing the menu key, and can browse frequently traded stocks. Stock App displays the value and percentage change up front; double-tap an entry to see more stats. While it's functional, Android is sorely missing the completeness of a stock-tracker like Bloomberg for iPhone. Get to it, developers.

Jessica Dolcourt reviews the latest and greatest smartphone apps, in addition to a healthy dose of Windows software. E-mail Jessica and follow her on Twitter.
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by androidtapp December 2, 2008 5:41 AM PST
I really like TouchTip, I was able to use it last weekend when dining out with friends to see the bill split. To bad we couldn't get the full effective use out of it... not the apps fault, but someone in our party didnt want to evenly split, yet pay their own smaller portion :-(
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by wackuser December 3, 2008 11:46 AM PST
There is a new Budget and Spending app available on the Android Market, called
Ca$hFlo.
It is simple enough to get folks to actually use it, while offering some nice graphs and statistics to reward usage.
Reply to this comment
by davidplayer100 January 9, 2009 11:11 AM PST
Touch Tip seems to be a pretty good app. I can't wait to see what kind of apps will be available once the market allows a method for payment for the apps. I think that the better apps will come out once a payment method (perhaps Google Checkout) is available because I figure if developers are going to spend loads of time making an app, they are going to want to get paid for their time.

David,
<a href="http://www.dirselect.com>Cell Phone Accessories</a>
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by pdaaccessory January 12, 2009 1:49 AM PST
Nice blog thanks for shearing...
http://www.pdaaccessories.com/cellphone_all.asp
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