This app was mentioned in 2 comments, with an average of 1.50 upvotes
It's OK. The applets are still are very basic.
For now, you can mostly determine the calories in foods, "ripeness" of fruit, and create your own "collections".
Collections are the primary way to (for instance) catalog all of the drugs in your medicine cabinet.
One of the limitations that I wasn't aware of seems to be related to the number of samples that can be compared at once. It seems that the maximum number of items that can be compared is a maximum of maybe few hundred. So, you can detect most common OTC pain relievers (that's another applet), but it would not be possible to detect say all of the potential variations of vitamins.
Once the SCiO is available in retail, I suspect the main app will get a major overhaul in terms of the visual design.
If you want to see what the app looks like, check out the screenshots here : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.consumerphysics.consumer
As for the device, it looks exactly like the black one that is being displayed around the main Consumer Physics website (several photos of it are on there).
Yeah this one: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.consumerphysics.consumer&hl=en
I sold mine (might buy another one when it's more mature though) so I can't test it, but looks like it can do some stuff out of the box like measure nutritional content of diary, meat and identify pills