The only Android tablet I've ever owned was a cheap-
model that slowly degraded from mildly dysfunctional to completely afunctional. I've since replaced it with a Chromebook. Which, thankfully, will run the MFA mobile apps that I need for work. As well as such Linux apps as LibreOffice, Firefox, and Thunderbird (I still don't understand why the Mozilla foundation named its email reader after a cheap wine).
Android apps are hit-or-miss on a Chromebook: some work well, some work poorly, and some won't even install. Can anybody (and I get the general impression that the Developer is on this board) tell me with absolute certainty whether or not the Android LeafSpy will run on a Chromebook?
I'm not terribly inclined to spend $15 on an app that may or may not work at all, that requires a hardware adapter for which the make and model recommended in the Google Play Store page would set me back another $30, unless I
know that (1) it will
actually run on a Chromebook, (2) that a dealership where (a) I've known my service-writer since he was in diapers and (b) the management knows they <vulgarity> me off big-time by saddling me with an unnecessary and unwanted 5-year note from which my credit score still hasn't fully recovered ("
exactly what part of 'balance on net-30 terms' did you
not understand?") will withhold that information, and (3) I can be convinced that in all of Orange County, CA, there isn't an independent EV mechanic who can work on a Leaf.
(And at any rate, at some point [hopefully not for a few more years], I will have to find somebody local, who will do a traction battery change-out on a Leaf, because [given that I kept both of my previous vehicles for 20 years each, and both outlasted their factory engines] there is no way in Hell that I'm going to send a perfectly serviceable vehicle to the scrap heap just because it needs a new traction battery.)