This app was mentioned in 67 comments, with an average of 2.51 upvotes
Team Viewer can do just that. I use it to 'save' less savvy relatives and friends with their difficulties. It has to be installed in both devices, but different versions. Read the instructions carefully. Each cell manufacturer has its own add on on the receiving device.
Wie wäre die idee, ein ganz normalen bildschirm zu nehmen? Entweder mit mini hdmi oder usb c? Sonst mal https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile Oder ander vnc server/clients ausprobieren.
Install Team Viewer on your phone and PC. Link them up. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=en
Manage your macro farming on your PC from your phone.
???
Profit!
Agree 100% with your comment.
While we hurry up and wait for that day to arrive...one suggestion for today might be to remote into their current smart-phones and assist them from afar.
You may wish to try one or more of the TeamViewer selections from the suite of TeamViewer Android Apps such as:
TeamViewer QuickSupport (for their smart-phones to be able to receive help):
https://play.google.com/stor/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.quicksupport.market
TeamViewer for Remote Control (for your smart-phone to provide help):
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
How about TeamViewer? Tell him to install the app (he might be able to do it). Once you both have it installed, you will be able to remotely connect to his phone from your phone/computer, login (he will only see your email) with your credentials and then, do a factory reset.
I've not had an android device in a while, but I remember reading that Teamviewer can now also control smartphones https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=en
Dont think its possible with a mobile, but it is if you use a computer. There are some apps tough but arent as good or fast as using a computer. Team viewer https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile Host https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.host.market
TeamViewer. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
You would need to install on both your Android device and PC. I haven't set this up yet, but I've been meaning to get around to it. I believe the free version let's you establish a remote connection.
Teamviewer is available for Android. Just need to have your friend install the app that lets them connect to a tech. You can then either install the counter app on your Android or use the pc client.
A few different ways, you can download the app TeamViewer remote control on your phone and your computer. Login and you're controlling your computer with your phone. Also theres an app called unified remote, basically the same thing, install the Android app and install the windows application. Here are the links for team viewer
For Android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=en_US
You can use this app for this:
> I was wondering if there's any way ian mirror my phone screen into my tablet?
If you can run TeamViewer Remote Control mobile on your Android tablet, and can run TeamViewer Quicksupport mobile on the phone, the resulting performance will depend more on your Internet speed than your hardware specs. And it's all wireless. No registration required.
Don't remember if TeamViewer supports remote audio though, so you might have to depend on your phone for that.
> I was wondering if there's any way ian mirror my phone screen into my tablet?
If you can run TeamViewer Remote Control mobile on your Android tablet, and can run TeamViewer Quicksupport mobile on the phone, the resulting performance will depend more on your Internet speed than your hardware specs.
Can you try to install the app from here directly: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
I don’t have a Chromebook myself so I am not sure if it works, but I am considering to get one, but it would be a bummer if TeamViewer does not work.
No, mai capitato.
Se però vuoi collegarti al suo telefono per controllare che non abbia impostazioni strane, puoi usare TeamViewer
I use Gramps on my PC but remotely connect to my pc via my android phone (samsumg) and even better my tablet using teamviewer
That's what I'm doing.
Desktop www.teamviewer.com
Android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
iOS https://apps.apple.com/us/app/teamviewer-remote-control/id692035811
Teamviewer. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=en
Here are some other options: https://techwiser.com/mirror-android-screen-to-another-android/
You could try Teamviewer, I've only used it for a PC to PC connection but it might be possible to control a phone from either your PC or another phone.
TeamViewer and QuickSupport addon will do the work. Try it and see!
Thoughts:
1) You can remote view your desktop with teamviewer on ipad. Pretty sure you can do that with android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=en Latency will be rather high but very very simple to set up
2) For tablets you can use direct software http://www.pcworld.com/article/260591/how_to_use_your_android_tablet_as_a_secondary_display.html
Teamviewer! It's saved me trips to the office a few times by letting me quickly remote into my PC at work from wherever I'm currently located and do whatever I may need to do whether it's check on a server or restart a service or something like that.
I've also remoted into my home PC to upload songs onto google music if I'm out somewhere and want to listen to some music that's not currently in my library.
How about ScummVM? You can use it to emulate older windows games, worth a shot.
Have you tried using TeamViewer on android and play it off a computer/laptop by screen mirroring? Might be a little laggy though.
A bulk file & folder renaming utility.
Make your own video games (2D point 'n' click adventure games are the focus).
An audio media player.
A small tool to shutdown your PC at a specific time, or to give you the option of shutting it down remotely.
A backup/folder sync tool.
A relatively simple video editor.
Junk file and useless registry key remover. You can expand upon the software locations it will scan for junk by using CCEnhancer.
A straight-forward CD/DVD/Blu-ray data disc burning suite. Handles audio CDs and disc images too.
Manage the contents of your clipboard with a variety of tools, such as replacing strings or ignoring certain copied characters (e.g. leading/trailing whitespace).
Download all/some audio from any SoundCloud profile.
A simple on-demand hard disk defragmentation program.
Unlocks files that are in use by the OS, letting you delete or move them again.
Self-explanatory really.
A really fun little tool for capturing anything on your screen in GIF form, allowing you to edit the frames and add text if/when necessary.
Plays MIDI files and makes them sound like old video game hardware.
Very powerful video converter.
This is a download manager to be used with file hosting websites, such as MEGA and RapidGator. It handles the wait time and gives you a local prompt for CAPTCHAs. It checks the availability of files, monitors the clipboard for URLs and also supports premium accounts with file hosters. Note that the program has a tool you can use to reset your router's connection to get a new IP address, and this is often erroneously flagged as a virus by anti-virus software.
A password manager. If you want to integrate it with your browser, install the KeePassHttp plugin and then add the appropriate extension to your browser. For Firefox, use PassIFox. For Chrome, use chromeIPass.
Think of this as the free and open source version of FL Studio.
Shows you extremely detailed information about any media file you point it at.
Splits single album files into individual tracks using the .cue sheet.
The official sync tool for the MEGA file hosting website.
An email client.
A powerful bulk audio file tag tool.
Sheet music and tablature editor, the free/open source answer to programs like Finale and Sibelius.
A tiny program that writes to a hidden text file on any specified hard drive after a specified length of time, to stop it from entering sleep mode. It's not recommended that you use this with SSD drives.
A very powerful video editing suite.
This is the open source release of Toonz, the classic-style animation suite that was used to create all of Studio Ghibli's animated feature films.
Maintains a selection of programs for you, installing them and their updates silently (without prompts or install wizards).
This website/program maintains a huge selection of portable versions of various programs.
This is a much better replacement for the Windows Task Manager (it can actually replace it system-wide if you want it to).
This software lets you communicate with and transfer files to/from your phone and your PC. You need to install the appropriate app on your device to make it work. My favourite feature is that it lets you send/receive SMS and WhatsApp messages from your desktop without ever having to touch your phone.
This is a 4-paned replacement/alternative for the standard Windows Explorer. It can be configured into 1, 2, 3 or 4-paned views. Forgive the butt-ugly website, the software is on point.
This is an RSS feed aggregator/reader. It has advantages/disadvantages over some other RSS aggregators, such as RSSOwl, but it wins against all of them for the simple fact that it's the only one still being maintained. RSS is being deprecated all over the place these days.
A tiny tool that adds the ability to minimise any standard window to the system tray.
This tool lets you recover deleted files. The usual caveats apply for software like this, of course.
This program will rename your downloaded TV shows to whatever format you wish, using online TV and film databases to fetch the correct info. Also includes support for MMA.
This is a sandbox tool, letting you execute files and programs in an isolated and strictly-enclosed environment, separate from your operating system. This is useful if you want to test software, or if you suspect something might contain a virus and want to monitor its behaviour.
This is a hard drive diagnostics suite from Seagate, but it works on any brand of hard drive.
This is a file/folder copier which uses Window's Volume Shadow Services to create current copies of files even when they're in use by the OS and would otherwise be locked.
This is a compact system information tool, showing temperatures and detailed hardware information.
A very powerful and high-precision scientific calculator, using the keyboard as an input method (instead of the on-screen number keys usually seen in calculators).
Scans for and removes malware, mainly intrusive and irritating stuff like browser banners or OS-level popup ads.
Hardware information tool for your SSD drives.
A very fast and lightweight PDF viewer, which also supports many other formats: ePub, Mobi, XPS, DjVu, CHM, CBZ, CBR.
This tool scans your system for programs/executables, checks their version numbers against an online community database to see if there is a new version available. I highly recommend you use the portable/zip version, as the other versions contain adware which might be tricky to spot and opt out of during the installation.
This is a remote access client, letting users access each other's systems/files. Also comes with an app on the Google Play Store, so you can manage your PC from the toilet.
A powerful replacement for the standard Windows sound tray icon.
Like FileASSASSIN, it lets you unlock/delete/move files which are locked by the system. I use both; sometimes one works where the other fails.
This is a downloader/updater for two huge collections of free programs/tools, Sysinternals Suite and NirSoft Utilities. The number of tools included here is insane, and it includes many you may have used/heard of, such as Autoruns, BlueScreenView, Process Explorer and HashMyFiles.
So far, TeamViewer has performed flawlessly for me for desktop-to-phone.
In my experience, these are what I have found to be the simplest ways of quickly sharing text between PC, Mac, and mobile, which you may find useful - but of course, I am always open to suggestions:
If you have TeamViewer [iOS] [Android], your can use the chat function to send text freely between mobile and PC, or Mac.
If you don't have TeamViewer, or you don't know what it is: you really, really, should consider getting it. It is a free app, that allows you to control your PC using your phone. It is arguably the best option for out there, for doing so.
If you are on iOS, and especially if you also have a Mac, then there is potential for it to be even easier - by merely copying the text to your clipboard - with Copied Keyboard [iOS]. It is a paid app, but it is without doubt the best purchase I have ever made on iOS: being able to automatically save the last 1000 clippings, search through them, organise them into lists, and not only retrieve them freely - via the custom keyboard - at will, on any app, but also automatically apply custom formatting to them - such as linking in markdown - or use custom macros on them whilst pasting: is nothing short of invaluable. What really seals the deal is the capability to live-sync your clipboards between your Mac and iOS devices. Furthermore, it has very integrated share functions, that allow you to, for example, tap share on a Reddit comment, choose 'Save to Copied', and therefore quickly save both the text and link, so I can search for it later, and perhaps assign it to one of my lists. The Copied App additionally has its own browser, which makes it yet even speedier to copy lots of separate bits from web pages.
When I want to preserve something more long term, I find that that Google Keep [iOS] [Android] has an important place, especially via its browser extension, [Chrome] [Firefox], which instantaneously auto-populates the current link, title, and other content, to a note that is retrievable on all of your devices. It is remarkable for Reddit: rather than saving useful posts - or comments - using the horrible native site functionality, which is non-searchable, it is instead possible to use the share function, to quickly save both the link and text to a Google Keep note.
As I have said, there are an infinite number of ways to share, but the most useful tends to come down to what each user is comfortable with. Hopefully you have found this useful. And if you have some suggestions, I would very much like to hear them.
I didn't try it Android, but I know there is a Teamviewer app for this OS. You could try it.
Depending on your devices and their android versions, https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
TeamViewer is great for remote access (and it's free)
There is an android version of teamviewer. I've never tried it myself though. Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile&hl=de
Teamviewer works very well, but the control can be a little tricky if your phone has a small screen.
Perhaps remotely controlling the device with one of these apps?
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.anydesk.anydeskandroid
Try a remote control app. You can go to the Play Store in a web browser and tell it to install the remote app (such as TeamViewer) on your phone - you'll just need to log in to the same account as on your phone before it'll let you.
Have you tried teamviewer? Is this what you mean?
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teamviewer.teamviewer.market.mobile
This is free.
Teamviewer has an app that works pretty nicely.
What about... Teamviewer?
Bonus Frugality: Local games are blacked out, which is a PITA, however, I figured out a free workaround.
On my PC, I added the Hola Unblocker add-on to my browser. This allows you to fake the location that your browser sees that you are located, allowing you to pretend you are visiting mlb.com from a different country. I set my country to England, and was watching the Red Sox game in a matter of seconds.
I tried the Hola app on my android phone, however, it appears that MLB uses the mobile data in addition to GPS to figure out your location, but fear not, I figured out another workaround.
On your phone, download the TeamViewer Remote Control app for Android or iOS. You will also need to download the TeamViewer application for your computer here. This will allow you to mirror your computers' screen on your phone, which you can combine with the PC steps I listed above, and you can watch your local team's live stream on your phone.