Samsung's Galaxy S8 can turn into a PC with its DeX dock
Samsung, like Motorola and Microsoft before it, is trying to turn a phone into a PC. Samsung’s Galaxy S8
will pair with a new Samsung Desktop Experience (DeX) dock accessory to
morph into a desktop PC-like environment. The specialized dock, that
looks like a candle holder, supports a monitor connection via HDMI,
keyboard, mouse, and two USB ports to help expand the Galaxy S8’s
capabilities. Samsung’s dock even has a special embedded cooling fan to
help keep the Galaxy S8 cool when you’re using it to display Android
apps on a monitor, and a USB-C connection to power it.
Samsung’s desktop mode comes with an app drawer on the
side, and supports Android apps with full access to notifications and
resizeable windows. The whole interface looks a little like Chrome OS,
but there’s no full desktop browser here. That means you’re limited to
how well Android apps are supported on bigger screens, and most apps in
the Google Play Store simply aren’t optimized for this type of usage.
Samsung’s own browser, Microsoft’s Office apps, and Adobe’s mobile
creative suite all work fine, but the vast majority will look like
stretched phone apps on the big screen.
Any app updated for Nougat will window just fine, but
Samsung is also handling windowing itself through its own system. While
you can unplug the Galaxy S8 from the DeX Station and app windows will
disappear, they don't come back when you plug the device back in.
Samsung is also using the iris scanner on the Galaxy S8 to let you look
at your phone in the dock to log into the desktop mode. Samsung is
really aiming its DeX system at business customers who need basic apps
on the go, but this really isn't going to replace your PC or laptop just
yet.
Samsung is partnering with VMware to bring virtual
Windows desktop apps to the DeX experience, thanks to an app that will
let you stream a virtual session. That will obviously require an
internet connection, and the reliability of that connection will be key
to how well the apps stream.
Samsung isn’t the first to try all of this, though.
Motorola tried and failed with the Atrix years ago, and more recently
Microsoft has put its effort into Continuum on Windows phones to try and
turn them into PCs. All of these solutions are held back by the fact
that the real desktop apps you’d expect from a Mac or PC simply aren’t
present, unless you stream them through virtual machines. Microsoft might have an answer to that soon, but right now both Microsoft and Samsung’s efforts are very basic examples of how a phone might turn into a PC one day.
The article was published on : theverge
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