If your Chromebook is not compatible you can download the Play store apk and installing it manually, After that you can follow the steps mentioned above to find the “Algodoo ” app and install it on your device.After that search for “Algodoo” and install the app on your chromebook. If your Chromebook is compatible, then you can install Play store by following these instructions.
The easily accessible tools in Algodoo allow new users to quickly create simple things like cars or basic machines, while still allowing more experienced users to make more complex constructions like intricate Rube Goldberg machines. With the tools listed above, users can create complex scenes. User-created simulations in Algodoo are referred to as scenes. x-position) for selecting objects for changing the appearance of objects (including the option to toggle the presence of velocity, momentum, and force vectors) for assigning text to an object for changing the simulated material of the object (including such parameters as density, mass, friction, restitution, and attraction) for assigning and changing an object's velocity for a list of the information about an object (including the area, mass, moment of inertia, position, velocity, angular velocity, momentum, angular momentum, energy (total), kinetic linear energy, kinetic angular energy, potential energy (gravity), potential energy (attraction), and potential energy (spring)) for assigning objects to various collision layers for performing "geometry actions" (such as gluing objects to the background, adding center axles, adding center thrusters, attaching tracers, attaching gears, or transforming the object into a circle) for editing objects via constructive solid geometry (CSG) for assigning keystrokes for controlling the object and for opening a script menu for that selected object(s). The drop down menu (accessed by double clicking or right clicking an object) includes several tools for liquifying, turning into sponges, cloning, and mirroring objects for generating plots of physics-relevant quantities of the object (such as velocity vs. Now, there is a new 3D system called Algoryx Momentum, also made by Emil Ernerfeldt. In October 2011, Algoryx released two new versions: Algodoo for Education and Algodoo 2.0.0.[citation needed In February 2017, Algodoo for iPad was updated to version 2.1.2 to maintain functionality with iOS 10. The name change was motivated by the fact that the word "phun" is used by many sites deemed inappropriate for younger users and the fact that trademarking "phun" was nearly impossible. In 2009, Phun was rereleased under the name "Algodoo" (a combination of the words algorithm and do). In May 2008, Ernerfeldt brought the Phun project to Algoryx Simulation AB, a company founded in 2007 by Ernerfeldt's former supervisor at Umeå University, Kenneth Bodin.
This project was released for public and non-commercial use under the name "Phun" and gained considerable attention after a clip of Ernerfeldt using the software went viral on YouTube.
In 2008, Emil Ernerfeldt created an interactive 2D physics simulator for his master's thesis project in computer science at Umeå University in Umeå, Sweden. This program has been used by many people including: educators, students, and young kids. The physics engine in Algodoo utilizes the SPOOK linear constraint solver by Claude Lacoursière and a modified version of Smoothed-Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) computational method.
The software is functional with: desktop and laptop computers, touch screen tablets, and interactive white board systems such as SMART Boards.
It was released on Septemand is presented as: a learning tool, an open ended computer game, an animation tool, and an engineering tool. Algodoo (/ˌælɡəˈduː/) is a physics-based 2D sandbox freeware from Algoryx Simulation AB (known simply as Algoryx) as the successor to the popular physics application Phun.