This might be the best month ever for Android. We've seen Android 2.2, the future of Android and even Google gleefully mocking Apple. Oh yes, and there were a ton of awesome apps
Mint: You know Mint, right? Pretty much the best online personal finance manager around (so good, the company behind Quicken bought it). Now they have an Android app, and it is minty fresh, with full search integration, widgets and other Android-y goodness you can't get with their Android app. It's free—if you have Mint, it's a must-grab, and if you don't, maybe now's the time to check it out.
Fring: A venerable multi-protocol app on many platforms, but I have three words for you regarding its latest Android version: Free. Video. Calling. The future is here folks, and it's on Android first.
Adobe Reader: Adobe's free PDF reader for Android is a slick way to read PDFs, with full multitouch gestures, like pinch-to-zoom, and reflowable text, to make docs easier to read. It does require Android 2.1, though.
Twitter for Android: Like I've said, the nicest Twitter experience on Android, hands down. Plus, it fully integrates with your contacts, much like Facebook. It's got some shortcomings—no multiple accounts, and every time you open it, it takes you to the most recent tweet (which is by design, sadly)—but since it's baked into Android 2.2, I'm pretty sure this is how most people are going to be tweeting from Android in the 6 months. Which isn't a bad thing. (For Twitter power users, I'd stick to Toiteur, though.)
NY Times: Like its iPhone counterpart, a really rich and content-filled app—every major section, from NY/Region to Politics and Business, is here, complete with videos, like Mark Bittman's latest recipe. It's simply fantastic to use, with sections navigated by a handy, Android-y dropdown windowpane. Honestly, it's remarkable how much you get for free, (especially considering how anemic the NYT iPad app is). Two downsides: you can't save articles to read later, and it can be kind of crashy. Overall, a must download.
Epicurious: You like food, right? Epicurious tells you how to make it taste good.
Springpad: The best alternative to Evernote for an in-the-cloud note-taking app, it's got, at the very least.
Runkeeper: Not as beautifully designed as my other favorite Android running app, Runstar, but Runkeeper blows it out of the water in terms of features: It tracks multiple kinds of exercise, along multiple parameters (calories, pace, etc.) and more importantly, it's cross-platform and uploads your results to their site for long-term tracking. Free.
Square: Square lets you take credit payments from anybody, using the free app and dongle, which plugs into the headphone jack. It's neat.
Dropbox: The best cloud-file-sync-and-storage service out there—seriously, it's spectacular—now has an Android app. It puts cloud storage from Google and Apple to shame with ridiculously seamless multi-platform syncing, and now it's got an Android app, so you can access or share your files from your Android phone. Free. (PS, if you haven't gotten a free 2GB account, use this link to get one.
Skyfire: Don't have Android 2.2 yet? No worries, there's a way to play Flash content right now, with Skyfire 2.0—one of the best alternative browsers out there. Like Opera Mini, Skyfire's compression servers do all of the hard work in the background (which means I wouldn't open your bank accounts or anything like that) so things load faster, and you can choose how sites will see your phone: Desktop browser, Android or iPhone. Flash support isn't perfect—for instance, Flash videos on Giz aren't detected, and Hulu wasn't, but overall it works pretty smoothly. And hey, it's better than nothing.
Dolphin HD Browser: The other other browser, Dolphin HD is a refresh of the Dolphin browser, which brought multitouch browsing to Android 2.0 devices. The HD rendition is better optimized for higher res screens, but the real reason to grab it is its extensibility via add-ons, and an extensive gesture control scheme, if you're into that sort of thing.
Super KO Boxing 2: I love Punch Out ripoff boxing games, so naturally I dig Super KO Boxing 2. Sure, it came out on iPhone months ago, and it could look way less pixel-y on the Nexus One, but for 99 cents, it's well done, and a reasonably entertaining fascimile of classic Punch Out action. You'll need a Droid or better, and 86MB of free space on an SD card.
Calltrack: This is handy. I'll leave it to Lifehacker to describe.
Sirius XM: Fairly self-explanatory—it's 120 channels of Sirius XM satellite radio, on your Android phone. It comes with a free 7-day trial.
SCVNGR: I'll let John describe it, since it's on iPhone
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