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Screen mirroring requires Windows 10 builds 1803 or newer, along with an Android device running Android 7.0 or later. Assuming you meet the software requirements, there's still the matter of hardware.
Microsoft is testing Android app mirroring to let mobile apps run on Windows 10 PCs. The Your Phone app works over Bluetooth and mirrors a phone screen directly to a Windows 10 PC.
It also includes a screen mirroring feature, which lets you control your phone directly from a computer. To use it, you'll need a PC running Windows 10 (October 2018 Update or later).
Microsoft has added beta support Android app screen mirroring in Windows 10 Build 1803 or newer for the latest Insider builds. At the moment the feature is only compatible with a limited number of ...
Now, some updates are in testing for that app which enables users to Android apps from their phone onto a Windows 10 PC with screen mirroring.
The Windows 10 Android screen mirroring feature is slowly rolling out now to specific devices. Using the new service, you'll be able to operate your Android smartphone from within Windows 10.
Using app mirroring, you can mirror your entire Android phone on your Windows 10 computer — apps and all. The feature will be available in the Windows 10 October update.
Now named “Phone Screen,” the Android app mirroring feature will only be supported on certain types of hardware and will also require the latest beta Windows 10 Insiders builds to function ...
Microsoft has released Windows 10 build 18356 (19H1 branch) with Android phone screen mirroring, but there are still five known issues.
Microsoft showed off the ability to mirror applications running on an Android phone to a Windows 10 PC last fall. Some Windows Insiders on the latest Windows 10 19H1 build can test-drive it now.