Microsoft is currently testing new functionalities for its Phone Link application to enhance the integration between Android phones and Windows PCs, allowing users to remotely lock their PC and access its clipboard directly from their Android device.
Phone Link already offers features like displaying notifications, texts, and photos from a phone on a Windows PC. However, some advanced capabilities require manual activation, such as using an Android phone as a PC webcam or accessing its files through Windows File Explorer, which necessitates enabling specific toggles within the Windows Settings app under “Bluetooth & devices” > “Mobile devices” > “Manage devices.” Users on recent Insider Preview Builds of Windows 11 are discovering additional options in this same menu.
A notable new option appearing for users on the latest Dev channel is an “access PC’s clipboard” toggle. This feature enables a connected Android phone to access text and images copied on the PC. Currently, this synchronization is one-way, from PC to phone, which is particularly beneficial for users of Google Pixel phones. These devices typically lack native cross-device clipboard integration found in many Samsung, OnePlus, HONOR, and Xiaomi devices that often come with Phone Link preinstalled or support two-way sync via methods like SwiftKey’s “sync across devices” feature or Phone Link’s “cross-device copy and paste” option, which is unavailable for Pixel phones.
The user experience on the phone side is also being improved. An updated Link to Windows app now displays a history of items copied to the PC’s clipboard, rather than just the most recent entry, as reported by Telegram user Legofan, utilizing the latest Canary build. Legofan also observed a new “lock PC” button within the app, which facilitates remotely locking a Windows PC from the Android phone. This remote PC control functionality requires the corresponding “Remote PC controls” toggle to be enabled in Windows’ mobile devices menu.
These new integrations underscore Microsoft’s ongoing efforts to create a more cohesive ecosystem between Windows and Android, contrasting with Google’s strategy of prioritizing its own Chrome OS ecosystem and reportedly working towards merging Android and Chrome OS into a single platform.




