Intel Unison may finally have gotten this fairly simple integration concept, that’s apparently not easy to execute, right.
How many times have you sat down to get some work done on your laptop or desktop, only to be interrupted by an app notification or text message on your smartphone? This break in workflow can impact your productivity, and it feels needless in this day and age of interoperability and ubiquitous connectivity. There have been a few efforts targeted at phone integration with the Windows platform, by both Microsoft with its Phone Link app, and Windows PC OEMs as well.
Intel notes Unison offers end users the ability to harness a multitude of functionality in Windows from their smartphone, like text messaging, voice calls, receiving and managing phone notifications, and transferring files and photos from a smartphone to a Windows laptop PC. The software runs over a Wi-Fi network through a router or even direct peer to peer connection, or Bluetooth, depending on the device types and setup.
I’ve personally been working with Window Phone Link for a while now, and have found it to be a frustrating mish-mash of partial functionality that works some of the time, but other times just simply glitches out and then gets in the way, negating the productivity benefits it was intended to offer.
And it seems Intel Unison may finally have gotten this fairly simple concept, that’s apparently not easy to execute, right.
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