I’ve been waiting for Android to take desktop mode seriously for years. Back in 2019, I bought a OnePlus 7 Pro and wasted an embarrassing amount of time trying to brute-force its half-baked desktop mode into something useful.

The idea made perfect sense to me even then. Phones were already absurdly powerful, and the thought of carrying one real computer in my pocket felt less like science fiction and more like delayed common sense.

What wore me down wasn’t the idea. It was the waiting. Devices like the Steam Deck eventually showed that docking a compact machine into a usable desktop setup could actually work, while Google seemed to lose interest in pushing Android the same way.

Samsung, meanwhile, kept refining DeX in plain sight. I’ve spent years lurking on r/SamsungDex, watching people post desktop builds powered by a phone, and resenting the fact that the version I wanted most seemed locked behind an ecosystem I never really wanted to join.

So when Android 16 finally brought a connected-display desktop session to supported Pixel phones, it felt like an admission. Desktop mode had spent too long living as a weird experiment, half promise and half hobby.

Now it’s finally being treated like a real part of Android.

Stock Android grows up

Android 16’s desktop mode is now built into supported Pixel phones, which on paper makes this a big moment for stock Android.

Plug a Pixel 8 or newer into an external display and it can throw up a desktop-style workspace with a taskbar, resizable windows, app snapping, and keyboard shortcuts instead of just mirroring the phone screen.

It’s the clearest sign yet that Google wants Android to do more than act like a mobile operating system when the hardware clearly has bigger ambitions.

That should feel like a win. Mostly, it does. But it also comes with an awkward truth. Samsung has been doing this for years, and with a lot more certainty.

Samsung DeX isn’t just Android stretched across a monitor. It feels like a separate desktop layer, with deeper optimization and more conveniences that actually matter once the novelty wears off.

Samsung also supports things Google still doesn’t, including using the phone itself as a touchpad.

There’s the rub. The idea is finally official, but Samsung still looks like the company that understood the assignment first.

The difference between shipping and sanding

That becomes obvious once the novelty wears off. Google’s desktop session has the right visual cues, but it still feels tethered to the phone in ways DeX solved long ago.

It behaves like Android trying on desktop clothes, not a desktop environment that has fully settled into them.

DeX is harder to dismiss because Samsung kept building around the less glamorous realities of using a phone as a computer. It feels more self-contained.

Google’s version still carries first-generation friction. The phone display dependence, lighter customization, and sense that the desktop borrows too much from the phone make it feel less like a mature workspace and more like an early build that happened to ship.

Case in point, I wrote this piece on a Pixel 8a hooked up to a hub, monitor, mouse, and keyboard, while also pushing audio to a Bluetooth speaker.

Android 16 desktop mode can absolutely get real work done. That’s not really in question. The issue is that using it makes it painfully obvious where Google is still catching up.

Where the seams start to show

Android 16 desktop mode starts showing its seams the moment you try to make the setup feel like your own. There’s no desktop-only settings layer, so even basic tweaks spill back into the phone.

Change the DPI to make text more readable on a monitor, and it changes on the handset too. You can’t change the wallpaper on desktop without changing the wallpaper on the phone either, which sounds minor until the whole desktop starts feeling less like a workspace and more like a projection.

Some of the rougher edges are harder to ignore too. Games run fine, which at least proves the concept isn’t starved for horsepower, but other parts still feel unfinished.

For example, the camera preview aspect ratio is off, and little issues like that keep breaking the illusion.

DeX, by contrast, has enough bells and whistles to earn its place as a daily driver. Its extra features don’t feel ornamental. They exist to sand down the friction that comes with turning a phone into a desktop. With DeX, the phone feels like the hardware running the desktop.

With Google’s version, the phone still feels like the main event. The desktop is there, but it never fully stops feeling tied to the handset.

Even so, both still have a whiff of novelty about them. That’s the part this category still hasn’t solved.

Living in the future is supposed to feel seamless, not like a chain of small concessions stitched together by a USB-C hub. The technology is here. The effortlessness isn’t.

Why this matters beyond Pixel

What makes Google’s move matter isn’t that it beats DeX. It doesn’t.

This signals that desktop mode is no longer some OEM curiosity. Once Google bakes it into stock Android on Pixel, the whole category gets harder to dismiss.

That changes the equation for app developers, accessory makers, and Android brands that mostly treated phone-powered desktop computing like a niche trick.

Samsung proved the idea could work. Google can make it harder for the rest of Android to keep shrugging it off.

There’s still some irony here. Google is validating a vision Samsung spent years testing in public, only to arrive with a version that feels less complete.

DeX still looks like the more polished system because Samsung spent more time sanding down the boring edges that make desktop mode live or die.

Still, I can’t be too cynical about Android 16 desktop mode finally showing up. After years of demos, workarounds, and wishful thinking, even that counts. Sometimes progress isn’t polished. Sometimes it’s just a platform finally admitting the nerds were right.

Share.
Exit mobile version