well thats what goes on with DEX in my experience with half of my apps. Imagine if you bought a car that was a convertible or had a sunroof in it and as loong as you had the top "down" your car had all its accessories like AC and radio etc etc but once you put the top "UP" then suddenly you no longer have a radio or AC or GPS or pwer windows or your safety airgbag no longer would deploy if needed becuase its temporarily "deactivated" but your car still drives it wo will get you point A to point B but no bells & whistles. Features from apps that otherwise appear when running the same app directily from phone not only dont work but dont even appear onscreen, at all. I have 3 rock solid dell precision high-end laptops with separate graphics adapters having 2GB+ of dedicated video ram in addition to 16 GB of regular onboard system ram and run DEX to them from a Samsung Note 10+ 5G (a work/job phone) an S21 Ultra (personal phone) and an older but still highly functional LG V40 (4G "burner account phone") - My issue is and always has been that although DEX loads immediately from any of those 3 phones onto any of my desktops (which may be, and usually are, hooked up to either a 32" LG 4k montor and/or LG 48" FHD monitor), everything is fine with ONE CRITICAL EXCEPTION. This is a great discussion because I too am a fan of DEX, but I'm going thru some agonizing issues which may lead me to ultimately call it kapoots with DEX. Baseus dock with several connections ( ) Samsung Galaxy S9 Dual-SIM (Exynos 9810, 64Gb / 4Gb RAM, with a 512Gb microSD) Linux on DeX app worked on Galaxy S9/Tab S4 and later devices, but it ceased official support in the end of 2019. DeX is available on all Samsung's flagship devices since the Galaxy S8 (tablets included) although I see it as quite sharp and usable, you can sense it is not really a desktop and some apps still behave as if they are in a "touch" environment. some proprietary, like Netflix or Youtube, cannot run easily in full screen while on DeX Dex obviously lacks advanced OS features, but you may subscribe a cloud service (such as ShadowPC), immediately turning your smartphone into a modern Windows computer not all Androis apps are optimized on DeX, but sometimes you can try the browser versions, which give you more options dematerialize your belongings and save money, since you may not need a computer at all.Ībout the issues (with possible workarounds): take advantage of the growing processing/memory power of smartphones DeX works with a docking station, cable linked to a screen, or wirelessly on a smart screen DeX gives you a simplier computer experience, at the same time it allows to enjoy the main actions you would perform daily as a computer user (folder/file organization open several apps at a time - side by side - and view them on a big screen resize app windows computer like browsing work with Office apps) keep all your files available in a device that fits your pocket and is always with you portability and flexibility for traveling (you can add a bluetooth keyboard or even use your smartphone's screen as a keyboard/mouse) Let me first introduce you the pros, imo: My long-term-tech-dream (since around 20 years ago) was to own a single device that would be my smartphone/computer, all the time.Īlthough I still look for alternatives, I seem to be a DeX evangelist.
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