briefly talked about a new feature called Continuum, but back then it was in the context of switching UIs on convertible devices based on whether you have the keyboard connected or not. And Continuum can still do that, but today at its Build conference, the software giant has announced a more interesting use case, with Continuum for phones.
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This kicks in when you connect a smartphone running
Windows 10 to a monitor. The UI you’ll see on the
monitor won’t just be a 1:1 representation of the
handset’s screen. Instead, the phone is basically turned into a makeshift PC, which will even work with a mouse and keyboard for interaction.
Windows 10 to a monitor. The UI you’ll see on the
monitor won’t just be a 1:1 representation of the
handset’s screen. Instead, the phone is basically turned into a makeshift PC, which will even work with a mouse and keyboard for interaction.
Initially, you see your phone’s Start screen on the left side of the monitor, but if you open a universal app that will take over the whole width of the monitor, as you can see from the screengrab above. So you’ll have no wasted space, and you’ll be able to do some work in a much easier way than if you were to simply glance at a representation of your phone’s screen.
Furthermore, all the usual PC keyboard commands will work in this mode, so you can use Ctrl+C for copying, Ctrl+V for pasting, and so on. Microsoft says it wants to let smartphones scale up to a full PC-like experience.
Unfortunately it looks like existing Windows Phones,
once updated to Windows 10, won’t be able to take
advantage of this feature. That’s because it requires new hardware in order to drive the dual-screen experience.
once updated to Windows 10, won’t be able to take
advantage of this feature. That’s because it requires new hardware in order to drive the dual-screen experience.
You may remember that Ubuntu thought about
something similar a few years ago, but the Ubuntu for Android project flopped eventually – perhaps because it was trying to do more (run ‘full’ Ubuntu when the phone was docked), but also because it wanted to pair two different operating systems from two different companies on the same device. In Microsoft’s case, it’s all Windows, so Continuum has no reason not to be successful.
something similar a few years ago, but the Ubuntu for Android project flopped eventually – perhaps because it was trying to do more (run ‘full’ Ubuntu when the phone was docked), but also because it wanted to pair two different operating systems from two different companies on the same device. In Microsoft’s case, it’s all Windows, so Continuum has no reason not to be successful.
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