Samsung Galaxy / Productivity / MEETING ROOM SCHEDULE
REVIEW
Meeting Room Schedule turns a spare Galaxy tablet into office signage.
An indie meeting-room display app aimed at the conference-door tablet job. Cheap to deploy, modest in ambition, and exactly as opinionated as a single-developer utility tends to be.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 4 MIN READ
Meeting Room Schedule
DR BERKUN CULHA
OUR SCORE
6.6
SAMSUNG GALAXY
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
In-app purchases
Office meeting-room signage is one of those genres that exists mostly because the alternative — a paper printout taped to the door, updated by whoever remembers — is worse. Dedicated room-display vendors sell tablet-plus-software bundles for the price of a small used car per floor, and a long tail of independent Android apps undercuts them by running on whatever cheap tablet the office already has in a drawer.
Meeting Room Schedule sits firmly in that long tail. It is a single-developer Samsung Galaxy app aimed at the conference-door tablet job, free to install with in-app purchases for the parts an admin will eventually need. It is the kind of utility that exists because somebody bolted a Galaxy tablet next to a conference room door and needed something to put on it.
Judged on its own terms — not against Joan, but against a printed sign — it is the better option. Judged against the polished enterprise alternatives, it is what you pick when the budget for those alternatives is zero and the tablets are already on the shelf.
It is the kind of utility that exists because somebody bolted a Galaxy tablet next to a conference room door and needed something to put on it.
FEATURES
Meeting Room Schedule is a kiosk-style display app: mount a Galaxy tablet outside a conference room, point the app at a calendar, and it renders the day's bookings on the door. The category is small but real — Joan, Robin, and Evoko sell hardware-plus-software versions for hundreds of dollars per room, and a self-installed Android tablet running a $0 app is the budget alternative.
The single developer ships it free with in-app purchases, which is how this corner of the Galaxy Store usually works. The free tier handles the basic display job; paid tiers unlock the things an IT admin actually needs at scale — multi-room management, longer booking windows, branding.
As an office utility it is judged on three jobs: pulling the right calendar feed, rendering it legibly from across a hallway, and not crashing between Monday and Friday. Everything else is decoration.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The price-to-function ratio is the headline. Galaxy tablets are cheap, this app is free to try, and the combination undercuts the room-display vendors by an order of magnitude. For a small office that needs three door tablets and not a procurement cycle, that math is the entire pitch.
Crediting the developer for shipping into a category dominated by enterprise SaaS is also fair. Solo-built office utilities tend to be more flexible than the vendor offerings — fewer assumptions about your calendar stack, fewer licence audits.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The Galaxy Store listing is thin — no screenshots, no long-form description, no release-notes trail visible from the store page. A door-display app lives and dies on what it looks like at three metres, and the absence of preview images means an IT buyer has to install it blind to find out. That friction will lose this app to better-merchandised alternatives every time.
The in-app-purchase model also leaves the per-room cost ambiguous until you are deep in setup. For a single tablet outside a single room it is almost certainly fine; for a floor of twelve rooms, the buyer needs a published price sheet before they pilot it, not after.
CONCLUSION
Worth a look for a small team that already has spare Galaxy tablets and wants something on the door by next Monday. Larger deployments should compare it directly to Joan and Robin on per-room cost before committing. Either way, demand screenshots from the developer before you mount the hardware.