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Product test

Working in the living room: "PC on TV" from Samsung tested

Martin Jud
20.12.2022
Translation: machine translated

Forget the HDMI cable. With "PC on TV" from Samsung, you can connect your TV in the living room wirelessly to your computer. However, the remote desktop application is only suitable for work to a limited extent.

This is changing now.

That's changing now, because Samsung TVs come with a feature called "PC on TV". If you have a (living room) keyboard connected to the TV, you can use it to remotely bring the PC from the office to the TV screen and work on it.

In this test, the PC on TV function is called "PC on TV".

In this test, I use the Click & Touch 2 living room keyboard from Prestigio. Find out how good they and other such keyboards are in a future article.

Two remote desktop solutions in one app

In Samsung's Tizen TV operating system, you will find the "PC on TV" function in the menu where you also select the HDMI source. The app offers the following features apart from two remote desktop functions for Windows, which I will discuss in this article:

Depending on which version of Windows you are using, the Remote Desktop function works differently. If you are using the Home edition of the operating system, you need to install additional software from Samsung. The Pro and Enterprise versions of Windows 10 and 11 already have a "remote desktop" built into the system.

The remote desktop feature works differently depending on which version of Windows you are using.

Connecting with "Easy Connection to Screen"

The additional software, which also enables Windows Home users to gain remote access to the PC via the network or WLAN, is called "Easy Connection to Screen" by Samsung. You can find the current download link directly in "PC on TV" on the big screen - as well as instructions.

To connect your TV to the computer, you must be logged in to "PC on TV" and "Easy Connection to Screen" with the same Samsung account. Then you can select the PC directly on the TV and the fun begins. Unfortunately, the additional software offers only a few setting options and leaves me a little perplexed.

There is indeed a function for adaptive streaming. But nowhere is it explained how much bandwidth is basically available for the stream. The adaptive streaming feature also only works on a 2022 model and above. I'm out with my 2021 - presumably. I still activated the option, but saw no difference in the result.

Connecting with Windows' "Remote Desktop"

With Windows Pro or Enterprise, I recommend connecting using the built-in "Remote Desktop". To do this, you must activate the function on the PC under Settings > System > Remote desktop.

Then you can add the computer on the TV to "PC on TV". To do this, enter the IP address or the computer name and your Windows user name and password. When connecting for the first time, you can also authenticate the devices with a PIN. If you do not want this, deactivate the corresponding setting before the session starts.

Other than that, you cannot make any further settings with the Windows Remote Desktop function. This makes sense, however, because with Microsoft's remote solution, the client makes the settings. In this case, the "PC on TV" software on the Samsung television. However, it does not offer any options - neither for the resolution nor for anything else - which I find stupid.

Remote Desktop Sessions: How well the streaming works

The connection works right away on the first try via both of the described ways. I let out a cheer that gives way to a frown the next moment. I turn to the "Easy Connection to Screen" supported session. On my 85-incher I see a Windows desktop as it should not be. The display is in the widescreen format of the office screen. However, not with black bars at the top and bottom, but squeezed to 16:9.

I end the session, select a 16:9 resolution on the PC and start the thing again. That helps, with 2560 × 1440 instead of 3440 × 1440 pixels everything looks correct. However, it annoys me that I have to switch back and forth manually. And even more that the picture looks a bit blurry despite the high resolution. There are never 1440p displayed, more like 720p.

I end the session again and start the Windows Remote Desktop Connection with widescreen resolution for comparison.

This displays the image in the correct 16:9 format, but only at 1920 × 1080 pixels. Nevertheless, it looks sharper than on the Easy connection. Not as crisp as on the widescreen PC screen, but sharper than I am used to from 1080p. Presumably the TV's image processor can still get something out of it. Yes, it makes it possible to work at a distance of two and a half to three metres from the 85 inches.

To find out how different resolutions affect the quality, I try all resolutions from UHD to 720p. The result is as follows: the resolution is constantly adjusted via the "Easy Connection to Screen". The TV adopts the PC resolution. However, this does not result in a sharper picture, presumably due to a bandwidth restriction. Only in a different scaling.

What's annoying about "Easy Connection to Screen"

But there's more: you can collapse the hint to an icon, but you can't remove or move that icon. It will always be in the same spot above everything else. No matter what you do. Only in the Windows lock screen does the part disappear.

A second point that weighs even more heavily on the operation is that the Easy software does not adopt the keyboard layout. Instead of a CH keyboard layout, which I have stored on the TV as well as in Windows, an English one is always offered. Z and Y are reversed, umlauts are not available, a real horror.

Picture quality differences: With "Easy" it is less easy

I am sitting two and a half metres in front of my 85-inch Windows. As I write these lines, I notice that the picture with Easy connection is not only less sharp. Letters, numbers, edges and contours also often have white-grey artefacts around them.

I didn't expect it to be any other way. This is a known limitation of the "Remote Desktop" built into Windows. And I'm not surprised that the Easy software can't do better. You can easily follow a PowerPoint presentation. Lethargic-making ASMR youtubers are just as much in it, but not agile fitness coaches bouncing through the picture.

If you want to watch videos, you do so either via a media server like Plex and corresponding TV app. Or via another TV app such as Youtube, Netflix or Tidal. Thanks to the TV's picture-in-picture function, work can still be done on the side.

Sound quality: Again with "Easy" less easy

Last but not least, a word about the sound. To my ears, it arrives at the TV in "undistorted stereo" via the Microsoft connection. If I use the Easy connection, however, it sounds clipped. Bass in particular loses its punch.

Conclusion: "PC on TV" works quite well with Windows Pro, but should be better

I am satisfied with the connection via the Windows Remote Desktop function. Even though I would like to have a higher resolution than 1080p or even settings options in the Samsung TV app. I'm only satisfied because I assumed before the test that fast picture movements would look awful on it. For that, it would need a different transmission method.

Titelbild: Martin Jud

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I find my muse in everything. When I don’t, I draw inspiration from daydreaming. After all, if you dream, you don’t sleep through life.


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