Your phone can drive a monitor — if the port can send a picture.
The short answer: a phone or tablet can run an external monitor only when its USB-C port carries video through DisplayPort Alt Mode. iPhone 15 models, most iPhone 16 and 17 models (not the iPhone 16e or 17e), M-series iPads, and many flagship Android phones can. A great many phones, especially budget and mid-range, have USB-C ports that only charge and move data, so no cable will ever produce a display. This guide shows you how to tell which group your device is in, what you actually get on screen, and when the honest answer is "use a laptop instead."
Scope of this guideExternal-display behaviour for iPhone, iPad and Android, taken from primary manufacturer documentation (Apple, Samsung, Google and Synaptics) and re-checked against current OS releases. Not spec aggregation.
iPhone 15 and most iPhone 16/17 models output video over USB-C, but not the iPhone 16e or 17e. Older models need a Lightning adapter. Either way you get a mirror of the phone, not a desktop.
An M-series iPad gives a real second workspace via Stage Manager. Non-M iPads mirror only, regardless of cable or dock.
Desktop-capable (DeX / Android 16), Alt-Mode-but-mirror-only, or no video at all. The model decides which.
A USB-C port is not a promise of video
USB-C is a connector shape, not a guarantee of what travels through it. The same oval port can carry power only, power and data, or power, data and video. The video layer is a separate capability called DisplayPort Alt Mode, and it has to be present in the device's hardware. This single fact is the most expensive misunderstanding in mobile-to-monitor setups, and it is the reason "USB-C compatible" cables get returned with one-star reviews.
The reason the confusion is so common is that the connector standardised long before the capabilities did. Two phones can have physically identical USB-C ports where one negotiates a DisplayPort signal and the other refuses to, and nothing on the outside of the phone tells them apart. The capability lives in the controller behind the port, which is why the only reliable answer comes from the manufacturer's own specification, not from the cable, the adapter, or the shape of the socket.
The phone or tablet negotiates a DisplayPort signal over USB-C. A video-capable cable or hub carries it to the monitor, and you get a picture. Examples: iPhone 15 and most iPhone 16/17 models, M-series iPads, recent flagship Galaxy and Pixel phones.
The USB-C port has no Alt Mode. The screen stays black no matter the cable, the adapter, or the monitor. The only wired workaround is a driver-based path (DisplayLink) on platforms that support it; otherwise the route is wireless or none.
So the first move is never "which cable?" It is "does this exact model send video out of its port?" The cleanest source is the manufacturer's own spec sheet or support page. We go platform by platform below, but keep the gate in mind throughout: every recommendation on this page is downstream of it.
The method, in five steps
- Confirm USB-C video output.Check the device's spec page for DisplayPort Alt Mode (or, for older iPhones, a Lightning adapter). No Alt Mode, no wired picture.
- Decide mirror or extend.iPhone mirrors. M-series iPad, Samsung DeX and Android 16 desktop mode give you a true second workspace.
- Choose the right link.A video-capable USB-C cable for a USB-C monitor, a USB-C to HDMI cable for HDMI, or a powered hub when you also need power and peripherals.
- Plan power.Outputting video drains the device. Use a monitor that feeds power back over USB-C, or a powered hub, for anything longer than a demo.
- Connect and set the display.Select the monitor's input; on platforms that extend, switch on the desktop mode and pair a keyboard and mouse.
How to check whether your exact device outputs video
Generic advice fails here because the answer changes model by model. The five-minute check below is worth more than any cable purchase, because it tells you whether a wired setup is even possible before you spend a cent.
iPhone
- Identify the connector: USB-C means iPhone 15 or later; Lightning means iPhone 14 or earlier.
- Most USB-C iPhones (not the iPhone 16e or 17e) output video over DisplayPort; expect a mirror, not a desktop.
- Lightning iPhones need a Lightning Digital AV Adapter; they also mirror.
- For high-resolution output, plan on a USB-3.1-or-higher cable, not the in-box cable.
iPad
- Open Settings → General → About, or check the model on Apple's site.
- Look for an M-series chip (M1 or newer). That is the gate for a true extended display.
- No M-series chip means mirror only, even on a perfectly good monitor and cable.
- Plan for a keyboard and pointer. Extended mode expects them.
Android
- Find the exact model number (Settings → About phone).
- Search the model plus "DisplayPort Alt Mode" or "DeX" on the maker's spec page.
- Samsung flagships often list DeX; Pixel 8+ supports Android 16 desktop mode.
- If video output is never mentioned, treat the port as charge/data only.
A pricier cable cannot create a signal that isn't there
It is tempting to treat a black screen as a cable problem and buy progressively more expensive cables until one "works." That logic is backwards. A cable's job is to carry a signal the device already produces; it cannot manufacture DisplayPort video from a port that doesn't speak it. The correct diagnostic question is not "which cable is best?" but "does this exact device output DisplayPort Alt Mode (or equivalent) video at all?"
Cables matter for a narrower reason: once video is present, the cable has to be rated to carry it. A bundled charging cable may move power and slow data while carrying no usable video, which is exactly why Apple tells iPhone owners to use a USB‑3.1-or-higher cable for high-resolution output rather than the cable in the box. The order of operations is fixed: confirm the port outputs video, then buy a cable rated to carry it. Never the reverse.
Cables, adapters and docks, decoded
People reach for "a dock" as a catch-all, but the four options below do genuinely different jobs. Picking the wrong one is how a working device still ends up with a black screen or a dying battery.
For a monitor with a USB-C video input. Carries the DisplayPort signal straight through. Simplest path; some USB-C monitors also feed power back to the phone over the same cable.
For the far more common HDMI monitor or TV. Converts the device's DisplayPort output to HDMI. No power path by itself, so the device runs on its own battery unless paired with a charger.
Adds HDMI (or DisplayPort) plus a power-input port and often USB-A. The separate power input lets the device charge while it drives the screen, the fix for the single-port problem in §9.
A larger, usually mains-powered hub with multiple displays, ethernet, card readers and high-wattage charging. The right home for a near-desktop phone or tablet setup. See our docking-station coverage.
iPhone mirrors - it does not give you a desktop
According to Apple's support documentation, supported USB-C iPhones (iPhone 15 models, iPhone 16 models except the iPhone 16e, and iPhone 17 models except the iPhone 17e) use the DisplayPort protocol over their USB-C connector to drive a USB-C display at up to 4K and 60Hz. For an HDMI monitor or TV, a USB-C to HDMI cable or Apple's USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter does the conversion. Apple notes that high-resolution output needs a USB-3.1-or-higher cable, not the basic cable bundled with the phone.
The important constraint is behavioural, not electrical. Apple states that when you connect an iPhone to an external display, it mirrors the iPhone's built-in display: the same content, the same vertical aspect ratio, usually letterboxed with black bars on a widescreen monitor. The single exception is apps with a dedicated "second-screen experience," such as video players, which can show full-screen content on the monitor while controls stay on the phone. There is no Stage Manager and no windowed desktop on iPhone; unlike a Samsung phone in DeX, an iPhone cannot become a desktop workstation.
Older iPhones with a Lightning port connect through a Lightning Digital AV Adapter (HDMI) or Lightning to VGA Adapter. Those adapters mirror as well, and they include a second port so you can keep the phone charging while it drives the display. That's a useful detail, because the adapter path otherwise occupies the only port. Apple notes that Lightning-era mirroring is limited to 1080p. iPhones that can't output video over their port (including the iPhone 16e and iPhone 17e, which omit USB-C DisplayPort output) can still mirror wirelessly with AirPlay to an Apple TV or compatible smart TV.
Where this is genuinely useful
Mirroring is the right tool more often than people expect: showing photos and video on a big screen, presenting from Keynote or a slides app, sharing a recipe or a manual hands-free, or playing a phone game on a TV. It is the wrong tool the moment you expect a separate workspace, because the iPhone simply has no concept of one.
- Exact model: USB-C (iPhone 15 or later, excluding the 16e and 17e) or Lightning (iPhone 14 or earlier)?
- Current iOS version, in case display behaviour has changed since this writing.
- Monitor input: USB-C video input, or HDMI (needs a USB-C-to-HDMI cable or adapter)?
- Accept that the result is mirroring, not a second workspace.
- For long sessions, confirm a way to charge while connected.
The iPad is the one Apple device that truly extends
This is where Apple's mobile line splits. Per Apple's support documentation, using an external monitor as a separate, extended workspace through Stage Manager requires an iPad with an M-series chip, for example recent iPad Pro and the M-series iPad Air. Apple has carried this requirement forward through current iPadOS: even as the windowed-apps multitasking system reached a much wider set of iPads, extended external display remains an M-series capability. Non-M iPads that support an external connection can mirror only.
It is worth separating two features that arrived together. The newer windowed-apps experience lets you resize and arrange app windows on the iPad itself across a broad model range. Driving those windows out onto a separate external monitor (a true second canvas with its own space) is the part that stays gated to M-series silicon. Buyers conflate the two and assume any iPad that can show windows can also extend to a monitor; it cannot.
The connection itself is ordinary USB-C: a USB-C to USB-C video cable for a USB-C monitor, or a USB-C to HDMI adapter for HDMI. To actually work at a desk, Stage Manager's extended mode expects an external keyboard and a pointing device, which is why the practical iPad-as-laptop setup is iPad plus dock plus keyboard and mouse rather than iPad and a bare cable.
- Does the iPad have an M-series chip (M1 or newer)? Extend needs it; mirror does not.
- Current iPadOS version and that Stage Manager is supported on the model.
- Cable or adapter matched to the monitor's input (USB-C video vs. HDMI).
- A keyboard and pointing device for the extended workspace.
- Power: a dock or USB-C monitor that charges the iPad during use.
"Android" is not one answer - it's three
Treating Android as a single platform is the fastest way to give a reader bad advice. The same Android version behaves completely differently across phones because the hardware gate (Alt Mode) and the desktop software (DeX or Android's own desktop mode) vary by manufacturer and model. Here are the three states that matter. For the model-by-model Android walkthrough, our Android-specific USB-C guide goes deeper on the wiring.
State 1: Desktop-capable (DeX or Android 16 desktop mode)
Samsung's DeX turns a supported Galaxy device into a desktop-like environment (resizable windows, a taskbar, the phone usable as a touchpad) when connected over USB-C to a monitor. Samsung's current DeX documentation lists supported Galaxy S, Note, Fold/Z Fold, Z Flip7, Z TriFold, A90 5G, and selected Galaxy Tab models, with important exclusions: the Z Flip7 FE and previous Z Flip models are not compatible with DeX by cable, HDMI, DeX on PC, or wireless DeX, and DeX for PC is no longer supported on One UI 7 and later, where Samsung points users to Link to Windows instead. Always verify your exact Galaxy model against Samsung's current support documentation. Separately, Google's connected-display desktop mode reached general availability with Android 16 (QPR3) for Pixel 8, 9 and 10 series and newer Samsung devices, producing a windowed desktop on the external screen over a DisplayPort connection. Both paths require USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode underneath, and on supported tablets the desktop session can extend across both the device and the external display as one continuous workspace.
State 2: Alt Mode, but mirror only
Plenty of Android phones output video over USB-C yet have no DeX and no supported desktop mode. Connect them and you get a mirror of the phone: fine for video and slideshows, frustrating for real multitasking, and subject to the same portrait/letterbox quirks as a mirrored phone anywhere. A driver-based alternative, DisplayLink, can drive a single mirrored display through an app on Android, but it brings its own catch (see power, below).
State 3: No native video out
Many budget and mid-range Android phones have USB-C ports that only charge and transfer data. There is no wired picture to be had at any price. The realistic routes are wireless mirroring (Miracast or Chromecast to a compatible TV or adapter) or, on phones it supports, the DisplayLink app with a DisplayLink dock. If neither fits, the honest answer is that this phone is not a monitor-driving device.
- Does the exact model list USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode (video out)?
- Is it desktop-capable: DeX, or Android 16 connected-display desktop mode?
- Current OS version and whether the desktop mode is supported on this device.
- Mirror, desktop-like, or app-dependent: what do you actually get?
- Can it charge while sending video, or will you need a powered hub?
Resolution, refresh rate and HDR realities
"It works" and "it looks good" are different questions. Even when the signal flows, the device caps what the monitor can show. The figures below are the platform behaviours documented by the makers; specifics still vary by exact model, cable and monitor, so treat them as the shape of the answer rather than a guarantee for your unit.
Driving a screen drains the device - plan for it
A phone or tablet pushing pixels to an external display is doing extra work and giving up its only port to do it. On a single-port device, that means the battery drains with no easy way to top up, unless power has another way in. There are three clean solutions, and all of them belong on the docking-station side of the decision: a monitor that supplies power back to the device over USB-C (look for USB-C Power Delivery on the monitor's spec), a powered USB-C hub with a separate power input, or an adapter (like Apple's Lightning AV adapter) that includes a charging pass-through port.
This is also where portable monitor compatibility and phone use intersect, because a portable monitor's own power design changes the math entirely. Some portable monitors draw power from the device, which accelerates the drain; others carry their own battery or can feed power back. If you are pairing a phone with a portable display, our primer on how portable monitors draw and supply power is the relevant background before you buy.
Know which one you're getting before you expect the other
Mirroring duplicates the device's display on the monitor: same content, often the same portrait shape with black bars. It is perfect for sharing a screen, watching video, or presenting, and it is what iPhone and many Android phones do. Extending treats the monitor as a separate workspace with its own windows, so the big screen becomes a real second display rather than a copy. On the devices covered here, extending is the domain of M-series iPad (Stage Manager), Samsung DeX, and Android 16's connected-display desktop mode.
Mirror: what you get
- An exact copy of the phone or tablet screen.
- Portrait shape, usually letterboxed on a widescreen monitor.
- Great for video, photos, presentations, sharing.
- Available on iPhone and most Android phones.
- No separate windows; touch stays on the device.
Extend: what you get
- A true second workspace with its own windows.
- Fills the monitor in landscape; real multitasking.
- Wants a keyboard and pointer to be usable.
- M-series iPad, Samsung DeX, Android 16 desktop only.
- Closest a phone or tablet gets to a desktop.
The distinction matters because buyers expect "plug into a monitor" to mean a desktop, and on a mirror-only device it never will. Setting that expectation correctly, before the purchase, is the difference between a happy setup and a return.
Every device class on one screen
One row per device type. Behaviour is summarised from Apple, Samsung, Google and Synaptics documentation; specifics still vary by exact model and OS version, so treat this as the map, not the territory.
| Device class | Video out? | Mirror or extend | Typical ceiling | Cable / dock | Charges while connected? | Most common failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPhone 15 / 16 / 17 (USB-C, not 16e/17e) | Yes · USB-C | Mirror | 4K / 60Hz, HDR (USB-C or Apple's AV adapter) | USB-C video cable, or USB-C→HDMI | Only via a powered hub / charging monitor | Expecting a desktop; getting a letterboxed mirror |
| iPhone 14 & earlier (Lightning) | Yes · adapter | Mirror | 1080p, no HDR | Lightning Digital AV Adapter (HDMI) | Yes, adapter has a charge pass-through port | Buying a USB-C cable for a Lightning phone |
| iPad with M-series chip | Yes · USB-C | Extend | High-res; varies by model | USB-C video cable / USB-C→HDMI; +kbd & mouse | Via dock or charging USB-C monitor | Forgetting Stage Manager needs keyboard + pointer |
| iPad without M-series chip | Yes · USB-C | Mirror | Mirrors device resolution | USB-C video cable / USB-C→HDMI | Via dock or charging monitor | Chip mismatch: no extend option appears |
| Samsung Galaxy with DeX | Yes · Alt Mode | Extend (DeX) | Desktop windows; model-dependent | USB-C→HDMI cable or powered hub | Via powered hub / dock | Assuming every Galaxy does DeX: the Z Flip7 FE and pre-Flip7 models don't |
| Pixel 8+ / Android 16 desktop | Yes · Alt Mode | Extend | Desktop windows over DisplayPort | USB-C→HDMI or powered hub (DisplayPort) | Via powered hub / dock | Older Pixel / non-supported model: no desktop |
| Android with Alt Mode, no desktop | Yes · Alt Mode | Mirror | Mirrors device screen | USB-C→HDMI cable | Depends on hub; often not on phone alone | Expecting DeX-style desktop; getting a mirror |
| Android, charge/data-only USB-C | No video | — | None (wired) | Wireless (Miracast) or DisplayLink app | DisplayLink: generally no charge while docked | No wired picture possible at any price |
Pick your device, see the path
Choose a platform. The path shows whether the gate passes, and the rows below tell you what you actually get. Android exposes its three real states.
Behaviour summarised from manufacturer documentation. Always confirm against your exact model and current OS version. See each platform's "verify before buying" note above.
Tell us what you're trying to do
The device router answers "what does my phone do?" This answers the other direction: "I want to do X: is a phone or tablet the right tool, and what do I need?" The honest verdict comes first.
Sometimes the right answer is "don't"
A phone on a big screen is genuinely useful for video, presentations, light reading, and (on desktop-capable devices) real focused work. But there are situations where pursuing it wastes money, and a different setup serves you better. Don't build this when:
- The phone or tablet lacks USB-C video output and you expect a wired monitor setup: the gate has already failed.
- You need full desktop multitasking but the device only mirrors (most iPhones, many Android phones).
- You want long working sessions but have no power pass-through path for the device.
- You need colour-critical or latency-sensitive work: phone-and-tablet display pipelines are not built for it.
- You are buying a dock to fix a device limitation a dock cannot fix: a hub cannot add Alt Mode to a port that lacks it.
- You would simply be better served by a laptop, a laptop screen extender, a portable monitor paired with a laptop, or a desktop docked setup.
If your real goal is "more screen for actual work," the honest alternatives usually win:
Native multi-display, real windows, no mirror-only ceiling: built for working, not casting.
The decision-support read for whether the extender route beats stretching a phone into a workstation.
One cable for display, power and peripherals: the right home for the power problem in §9.
Phone vs. tablet vs. laptop, honestly
If the choice is still open, here is the blunt version of where each device lands for driving an external screen:
Always in your pocket; great for video and presenting. Only Samsung DeX or Android 16 desktop phones approach real work, and even then within limits.
An M-series iPad genuinely extends and can stand in for a light laptop. Non-M tablets are mirror-only. Strong for sketching, reading, and focused single-task work.
Native multi-monitor, full windowing, no Alt Mode lottery. If the goal is a productive two-screen desk, this is almost always the cheaper and less frustrating route.
Still have a specific compatibility question? Our common compatibility questions cover the recurring ones, and every recommendation here follows our published review methodology.
The accessories you'll actually need
Only relevant after you've confirmed your device outputs video. These are accessory categories, not endorsements of a specific unit: match the spec to your device and monitor.
Key takeaways
If you remember nothing else
- One gate decides everything: does the exact device output video over USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode?
- A cable carries a signal; it cannot create one. Confirm the port, then buy the cable.
- iPhone mirrors only: no desktop, regardless of cable or dock.
- iPad extends only with an M-series chip; other iPads mirror.
- "Android" is three answers: desktop-capable (DeX / Android 16), mirror-only, or no video.
- Driving a screen drains the device; plan a power input for any real session.
- If the goal is genuine two-screen work, a laptop is usually the cheaper, less frustrating tool.
A black screen, diagnosed in order
When a phone or tablet won't show on a monitor, the instinct is to swap cables. Resist it until you've checked the steps below in order, because each one rules out a whole category of cause. Most "it just won't work" cases are settled by step one.
- Confirm the device outputs video at all.This is the gate from §1. If the exact model has no DisplayPort Alt Mode (and no Lightning adapter path), there is nothing to fix downstream: the port will never produce a picture.
- Set the monitor to the correct input.A "no signal" message usually means the monitor is watching the wrong port. Cycle its input/source to the exact connector your cable is plugged into.
- Use a video-capable cable, not the charging cable.The in-box cable may carry power and slow data but no usable video. Swap to a cable rated for display output (USB‑3.1-or-higher for high-resolution).
- For HDMI, confirm the adapter actually converts video.Cheap "USB-C" dongles can be charge/data only. Use a USB-C-to-HDMI cable or adapter that explicitly lists video output.
- Give it power.Some setups won't initialise a display on a nearly empty battery, and a single port can't output video and charge at once. Add a powered hub or a charging USB-C monitor and retry.
- On extend platforms, switch the mode on.An M-series iPad, Samsung DeX, or Android 16 device may default to mirror. Enable Stage Manager / DeX / desktop mode and pair a keyboard and pointer.
Symptom to likely cause
Source basis for this guide
This guide was checked against current manufacturer documentation for Apple USB-C external displays and iPad external-display behaviour, Samsung DeX compatibility, Android connected-display behaviour, and Synaptics DisplayLink platform support. Because phone and tablet display behaviour changes by model and OS version, verify your exact device against its maker's current documentation before buying a cable, dock, or portable monitor.
Common questions
No. A wired picture requires the phone's USB-C port to carry video through DisplayPort Alt Mode. Many phones, especially budget and mid-range Android models, have USB-C ports that only charge and transfer data, so no cable will produce a display.
Check the manufacturer's spec sheet or support page for "DisplayPort Alt Mode," "USB-C video," or "external display" support. iPhone 15 models, most iPhone 16 models and most iPhone 17 models output video over USB-C, but the iPhone 16e and iPhone 17e do not; iPads need an M-series chip to extend. For Android, search the exact model plus "DisplayPort Alt Mode" or "DeX." If the spec sheet never mentions video output, treat the port as charge and data only.
No. Per Apple's documentation, connecting an iPhone to an external display mirrors the iPhone screen, except in apps with a dedicated second-screen experience such as video players. iPhone has no desktop or extended workspace on an external monitor.
A true extended display through Stage Manager requires an iPad with an Apple M-series chip (M1 or newer). Other compatible iPads can mirror only. Apple's support documentation lists the qualifying M-series models.
DeX is Samsung's desktop-like mode that appears when a supported Galaxy device with USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode connects to a monitor. Samsung's current documentation lists supported Galaxy S, Note, Fold/Z Fold, Z Flip7, Z TriFold, A90 5G and selected Galaxy Tab models. Note the exclusions: the Z Flip7 FE and earlier Z Flip models are not DeX-compatible, and DeX for PC is dropped on One UI 7 and later (Samsung points to Link to Windows instead). Verify your exact Galaxy model against Samsung's support pages.
Yes, on supported devices. Google's connected-display desktop mode reached general availability with Android 16 (QPR3) for Pixel 8, 9 and 10 series and newer Samsung devices, over a DisplayPort connection. Other Android phones with Alt Mode mirror only.
Only if power has somewhere to come from. A single USB-C port outputting video cannot also accept charge unless the monitor supplies power back over USB-C, or you use a powered hub or dock with a separate power input.
Only if the device already outputs video and the previous cable was underspecified. A cable carries a signal; it cannot create one. If the port lacks DisplayPort Alt Mode, no cable at any price produces a picture. When video is present, use a cable rated to carry it: Apple recommends a USB 3.1-or-higher cable for high-resolution iPhone output.
Because mirroring copies the phone's vertical screen shape onto a widescreen monitor, leaving black bars on the sides. That is normal for mirror-only devices such as iPhone and many Android phones. Only an extended desktop mode (M-series iPad, Samsung DeX, or Android 16 desktop mode) fills the monitor with a landscape workspace.
Yes, if the phone or tablet outputs video. A hub or dock passes the video through and adds a power input and extra ports, which solves the single-port charging problem. But a hub cannot add video to a port that lacks DisplayPort Alt Mode; it only routes a signal the device already produces.
No. DisplayLink's supported platforms are Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, Ubuntu and Android. On Android it drives a single mirrored display through the DisplayLink app, and the device generally cannot charge while docked. It is not available on iOS or iPadOS.
Sometimes. Many phones mirror to a TV or wireless display adapter using Miracast on Android or AirPlay on iPhone. Wireless mirroring avoids the cable question entirely but adds latency and depends on the receiving display, so it suits video and presentations more than responsive work.
Yes, if the phone outputs video. The monitor's resolution does not change the gate: a device with DisplayPort Alt Mode drives the panel up to its own ceiling, and supported iPhones (iPhone 15, and most iPhone 16 and 17 models) output up to 4K at 60Hz, for example. A 4K monitor will not receive a picture from a phone that has no video output, the same as any other display.
A video-capable USB-C cable can carry a signal for any device that produces one, so a good cable is reusable. But the cable does not grant the phone video output. If the phone lacks DisplayPort Alt Mode, the same cable that drives your laptop's monitor will still show nothing from the phone. The capability lives in the device, not the cable.
The five words that decide the outcome
Each of these has a fuller entry in our glossary.
- DisplayPort Alt Mode
- The capability that lets a USB-C port carry video. The gate this whole guide turns on.
- Mirror
- An exact copy of the device screen on the monitor, usually letterboxed on a widescreen panel.
- Extend
- A separate workspace on the monitor with its own windows. Only some platforms do it.
- Samsung DeX / desktop mode
- Desktop-like environments on supported Galaxy and Android 16 devices over USB-C.
- Power Delivery (PD)
- The USB-C standard that lets a monitor or hub feed power back so the device doesn't drain.
Independent Research Analyst, Portable Productivity Systems ↗
Boniface Musembi evaluates how phones, tablets, portable monitors and docking stations behave in real multi-screen workflows, judging each by how it performs when actually carried and connected, not by spec sheets. This guide is a compatibility synthesis built from primary manufacturer documentation and re-checked against current OS releases; where a phone simply cannot drive a monitor, it says so plainly, even with an affiliate link on the table. His assessments draw on independent, published research and a documented review methodology.