

Get-AppxPackage *Microsoft.YourPhone* -AllUsers | Remove-AppxPackage Type or copy-paste the following command:.To uninstall Your Phone in Windows 10, do the following. If you have find no use for this new app, you might be interested in uninstalling it. With a linked phone, continuing on your PC is one share away. Surf the web on your phone, then send the webpage instantly to your computer to pick up where you left off to continue what you’re doing–read, watch, or browse with all the benefits of a bigger screen. For PCs tied to the China region, Your Phone app services will be enabled in the future.įor iPhone users, Your Phone app helps you to link your phone to your PC. Android 7.0 and above are compatible with Your Phone app.


You will receive an app from Microsoft which you must download to your mobile phone and follow the setup prompts. To light up this experience, open Your Phone app. Need to add a photo to your presentation? Want to spruce up that selfie with some Windows Ink action? Just drag and drop.Īnd rolling out in the coming weeks, Android users might also start to notice a desktop pin taking you directly to Your Phone app – for quicker access to your phone’s content. With Your Phone app, your Android’s most recent photos sync to your PC automatically. You can finally stop emailing yourself photos. Snap a pic on your Android, see it on your PC. If they send some of my data over the internet but promise not to look at it, that is not the same thing to me as not sending it in the first place.Coming soon, we’re bringing the first set of features to Your Phone app for Windows Insiders with an Android device. What I want to know is if they transmit any of my phone (or PC's.) data over the internet in the first place, or whether all data stays local to my network. In particular, "relying" on local connections and not "storing" it on Microsoft's servers is not the same thing as "never sending data over the internet" to begin with. When disconnected there is no maintained data, but rather a local cache on the user's PC for some items. Your Phone relies on local connections through Wi-Fi (the iPhone also needs Bluetooth), but the system never takes your data and stores it on Microsoft's servers.

This page claims the following, but I find it unsatisfactory: It makes me wonder about the privacy implications. It requires a Microsoft account, but I don't really see why that should be necessary for a local connection between my phone and my computer. I'm trying to decide whether or not to use the Your Phone app on Windows, and not finding much information on it.
