Orgzly (http://www.orgzly.com/) works well enough for me. It can sync to DropBox, so I can put all my .org files into DropBox for replication/backups and have Orgzly read & update them.
It's not full org mode for sure, but it's a solid way to read and do simple changes to my .org files on my phone.
I am not even a regular Emacs user (sorry, on the Vim side for now), and I think Orgzly is a great note-taking app. Actually the best one I've tried so far. It's true! :)
As tools like Evernote and OneNote rose to fame, I've always wondered why do people use such sophisticated note taking apps? People don't seem to be using it for to do list? Maybe because it allows things to be searched? Can someone explain what notes they take or how do they use it?
I still end up using a sophisticated note app (AnyList) for remembering spinach. Real-enough-time syncing with my non-techie significant other's phone is pretty great, the latency is low enough that we divide and conquer at the grocery store.
When I take meeting notes, I end up using OneNote or Google Docs:
- I have a tree of `Who - What` (and the counter-bikeshedding).
- Images of block diagrams sneak in, especially if it's a planning or design meeting.
- Full text search is handy, one-note especially spoiled me by doing OCR
- I like GDocs in particular for the real-enough-time collaboration. It can help quieter people not get steamrolled in conversation, especially if you have a boisterous note-taker to speak up for them :)
It's not full org mode for sure, but it's a solid way to read and do simple changes to my .org files on my phone.