No more need to send photos separately from your phone to your PC. On your Surface, open the Your Phone app, then select Photos. Optional You can save a picture to your Surface, open it, or share it in other ways if you like.
With the Microsoft OneDrive app, you can automatically upload backup copies of all your pictures. This lets you store your pictures on OneDrive, so you can get to them from wherever you can get to OneDrive.
If this is your first time signing in, select Start Camera Upload when asked if you'd like to automatically upload photos you take on your phone or mobile device. Now every photo you take on your phone or mobile device will be saved to OneDrive. If you want videos to be saved to OneDrive too, make sure Include videos is turned on.
OneDrive is built into Windows 11 on your Surface, so you can get to your photos and other files you have on OneDrive right in File Explorer. On your Surface, select File Explorer on the taskbar.
Sign in with the same Microsoft account that you used to sign in to the OneDrive app on your phone. Your pictures will appear, and you can open them from there. Play music from your favorite music services on your Surface and Android so you never miss a beat. On your Surface, download the music app you want to use from the Microsoft Store. Here are a few more popular music services you can use on both devices:. Note that Surface Duo comes with Spotify already installed on unlocked devices.
Note: You'll need to have the app for the music service on your Surface and your Android phone or mobile device, as well as an account and subscription for each. Here's how:. Find the MP3s or other personal music files on your PC.
Music files can't be protected using digital rights management DRM. Select Paste to upload them to your Music folder on OneDrive. Open the OneDrive app on your phone or mobile device and sign in with the same Microsoft account you used on your Surface. Find the Music folder that contains your MP3s, and then tap a song to play it on your phone. With Microsoft Office on both your Surface and Android device, you can get to your documents and files no matter which device you're on when you save them to Microsoft OneDrive.
This is handy for those times when you're working on shared Office files on your Surface and want to read them on the go and even make a change or two. Note: Basic editing features are free. Use of advanced editing features in Office requires a subscription. In Word, select New , write what you want, then select Save. On your Android phone or mobile device, open the Office app, sign in with the same Microsoft account if prompted , then select the document or file you were working on.
If you use the Microsoft Sticky Notes app on your Surface, you can also get to your notes on both your Surface and Android. When you're signed in with the same Microsoft account, your sticky notes stay in sync, so you can make changes in one place and see them in the other place. On your Surface computer, select Search on the taskbar, enter Sticky Notes in the search box, and then select the Sticky Notes app.
In Sticky Notes, select Settings , and then select Sign in. Sign in with the same Microsoft account you use on your Android phone or mobile device.
This article will help you learn those solutions and apply them for yourself. So there is no need to panic if you can't attach a picture to text message Android and follow this article properly. This is a very common searched topic on Google. Many people have faced this MMS problem issue and search for the reason. There are two major issues that people face this problem. A network problem or software issue is mainly responsible for this.
Let's see the reasons for the searched topic "I can't send pictures through text on my Android" -. Sometimes people live in such a place where the network connection is very weak. In that case, MMS can't be delivered. Message cache and data is also responsible for this problem.
Sometimes it interrupts the messaging functions and you are not able to send or receive MMS. Some major software problems are also responsible for this problem.
They disable various functions and people sometimes face this problem. In that case, you have to create or modify the APN settings. The first thing you have to check is your mobile network connection. The MMS function requires an active cellular data connection. Without the data connection, you can't attach the picture to text message Android.
To check if the cellular data is enabled or not, you need to go to the settings option. Then go to "Wireless and Network Settings" and tap the "Mobile Networks" and enable it by tapping, if the data is already on, you don't need to tap. Now you can take an attempt to send MMS.
There is another factor about MMS. MMS functions do not run well without the provider's network. Try to back in the provider's network and attempt again if you are unable to send MMS. People often face this problem and think wrong. Sometimes you are connected to the cellular data but you are unable to send MMS. A weak network can be the reason that the problem appeared. In this case, first, check out the network bars. If there are 5 bars the network is strong. Generally, this strong and weak network varies from the area.
Suppose in the city area, the maximum time the network is strong. Again in the village area, you may not get the proper network. The Galaxy S8's Not necessarily much wider than that of the 5. How does that change the user experience? Well, it's actually a double-edged sword. This display format allows software developers to show more content on screen, such as additional information, or some kind of contextual app controls, for example.
On the other hand, if this screen format isn't used efficiently, it may lead to inconvenient UI, with some important elements ending up in a very hard to reach corner of the screen. It also means most video content will have black bars on the sides, as it's distributed in aspect ratio. The same goes for some games and apps out there. For the most part, though, the extra-tall display doesn't stand in the way, it doesn't make things look bad or inconvenient.
But does it really enhance the experience? If we're looking for some magical way in which this Software still works the same exact way it used to, so between the Galaxy S8 and the S7, there isn't really that much of a difference in the way you'll be doing or viewing things.
There is one major benefit to this tall screen we can think of, and that's the ability to see more content in applications whose purpose is to show you content. Think the web browser, where you read articles and browse through long web pages, or the Kindle app, where you read books it'll fit more on each page, meaning fewer page turns , or the calendar, where more events will be visible at a time in agenda view.
This is where the main benefit of this screen is found. That's more than enough pixels, resulting in ppi pixels per inch — incredible pixel density that makes even tiny fonts appear super fine. Other than that, this is an AMOLED display not much different from those of previous top Samsung phones: it gets plenty bright when outdoors, as well as very dim when viewed in the dark, which is all great.
Viewing angles are still wonky, meaning brightness is retained, but colors quickly shift to colder ones even when viewed at slight angles. To add some context here: IPS LCD screens usually behave in the opposite way, where we observe reduced brightness or contrast, but retained color characteristics at angles.
Once again, the default color mode is 'Adaptive', which characterizes with a slightly cold temperature bluish cast and unnecessarily oversaturated colors. It feels a bit excessive, which is why we recommend switching to some of the other available modes. In addition to a slightly lacking red, color intensity on Basic is weak across the board, causing the screen to look desaturated and lifeless.
Because of that, we recommend using the AMOLED Photo mode, where colors aren't exactly true to life, but are at least pleasantly vivid, with natural enough balance. Samsung has, once again! This time, we're not dealing with major functional shake-ups, but rather a visual rethinking.
The operating system that comes pre-installed is Android 7. The new visual style of the user interface is interesting and unique. The iconography has a simplisic style with clean, yet thoughtful shapes and curves. The new gradient wallpapers with animated 'stars' overlay correspond well to this new style, although we can't say they are exactly attractive.
Now let's take a look at the essential communication applications. The phonebook is incredibly clean — it contains only two tabs: Recents and Contacts. In what seems like a questionable move, the favorites aren't found in their own, separate tab, but at the top of the contacts list.
What's probably a bigger insult, however, is the fact that the tabs are close to the upper edge of the screen, which obviously not the optimal placement with such a tall screen. Samsung claims it has tailored its software to the tall screen, but when there are such decisions where the tabs in some of the most used apps like phone and messaging are put at the top, instead of close to the easy-to-reach bottom edge, it makes you realize those efforts haven't gone too deep.
The screen is big enough, so typing tends to be a comfortable experience with the Samsung Galaxy S8. The portrait keyboard has a clean, yet functional design, with enough space between keys.
There is a handy number row above the letters, although we would have liked to see the frequently used 'comma' and 'apostrophe' keys somehow included in the main layout. The Samsung calendar app is very likeable. It's quite modern, with nice, soft colors, a convenient week view, and swift appointment creation. While Samsung has promised to make Bixby capable of operating almost every aspect of the phone for the user, by means of voice, currently its expertise is limited to a number of things: vision, reminders, and homescreen info cards.
Notice that voice commands aren't supported by Bixby at launch — this functionality will be rolled out later, perhaps sometime in May. At the moment, voice commands are handled by Google Assistant. Bixby Vision is best described as a smart, contextual camera, which can detect a number of categories, such as QR codes, images, places, text, and… wine. Weirdly, wine has its own separate category, probably because Samsung partnered with Vivino, which is an established wine database service.
Using Bixby vision is a hit or miss experience — its object recognition accuracy is decent at this point, but definitely needs more work if it is to be more practical than a simple text search, which is Vision's ultimate goal. When it gets the objects right, the image search feature Pinterest pics works well, but shopping is not very reliable, often returning no or inaccurate results.
Products with labels on them, such as a branded box of chocolates, work well, but more generic-looking things, like a black laptop or a phone, for example, seem to be almost impossible to recognize.
It's an HTC BlinkFeed slash Google Now kind of screen, which aggregates a bunch of organization and lifestyle features, such as alarms, next calendar appointments, reminders, latest news, weather forecast, frequently visited webpages, and more. It's nice and fits the overall concept of a virtual assistant; it acts like a summary of your day. Bixby is a promising Samsung feature, and even though it's still in its infancy and doesn't offer anything that isn't already available on rival platforms, it's something Samsung should definitely keep developing, because it'll soon prove to be a valuable competitive asset.
This has to be the most versatile phone when it comes to security features!
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