I also needed a way to easily access QGIS from my mobile, an iPhone in my case. 
A nice solution turned out to be the free version if iGIS, which I believe is 
also available for Android devices. If only a one-way communication is needed, 
then almost any decent GPS application will work. Most produce exportable GPX 
files.

The nice thing about iGIS is that it imports and exports points in shapefile 
format, which can also be edited in QGIS and sent back to the mobile device. 
Currently, QGIS is reading several point shapefile files located in my Dropbox 
folder, which is automatically updated in the iPhone Dropbox folder. Since iGIS 
imports directly zipped files from Dropbox, the communication is as seamless as 
it is going to get - without a QGIS mobile app.

best,
Jan


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