Even in its unfinished state, iPhone Mirroring on Mac is way ahead

Of all the changes to the Mac coming this year, the hype has been, justifiably, all about Apple Intelligence. But another feature really caught my eye, and in my time testing it in the macOS Sequoia public beta, it’s gotten me pretty excited about its potential.

That feature is iPhone Mirroring, which puts a mockup of your iPhone on your Mac’s desktop, letting you interact with it as if it were right there in your hands. It’s a really neat new trick and one that adds a heap of cross-compatibility between my Apple devices.

Recommended Videos

Yet it’s not just iPhone Mirroring’s abilities that have me singing its praises — it’s also the absolutely shocking state of Microsoft’s equivalent on Windows. Called Phone Link, this app is so embarrassingly bad that it makes iPhone Mirroring — even in its unfinished state — look like the app of the year in comparison. Given I split my time between Windows and macOS, I wanted to see how these apps stack up against each other — and the results were not pretty.

The Phone Link disaster

Digital Trends

Right from when you first open the iPhone Mirroring app in the macOS Sequoia beta, the experience is a pretty good one. Up pops a mockup of your iPhone on your Mac’s desktop, with everything exactly as you’d expect it. App icons are in the right place, your wallpaper is the same, and all your settings are intact.

Phone Link in Windows, though, is very different. Instead of depicting your phone on the screen, it’s much more of a traditional app. On the left you’ll see your most recent notifications, with your phone’s status in the top-left corner. In the middle you’ll see … well, that’s the thing. My Phone Link experience was so poor that whatever the app intends to show in the middle section simply didn’t appear. Phone Link was adamant that my iPhone was not paired, even though it was displaying my recent notifications on the left. That gives you a flavor of how subpar Phone Link is.

Taking different approaches to displaying paired devices is fine, but that’s not my problem with Phone Link. Instead, pretty much every aspect of the Phone Link experience is a total nightmare. After attempting to pair my iPhone using a QR code, the Link to Windows iOS app said the process was complete. Phone Link on Windows, though, just endlessly showed a spinning loading icon, with no progress in sight. Restart the app and it says my phone is paired but it needs Bluetooth permissions, even though everything Phone Link asks for has been granted.

And so I’m left with a buggy, half-connected app that is basically useless except for showing my notifications. Microsoft already has a reputation for shockingly bad software (having used Windows for over 20 years, I can attest to that), and Phone Link is doing nothing to dispel that notion.

Apple gets it right

Apple

Things couldn’t be more different when it comes to Apple’s iPhone Mirroring app. There’s no need to scan a QR code or dive deep into your device’s settings. Just ensure your iPhone and your Mac are running iOS 18 and macOS Sequoia respectively, are signed in to the same Apple Account (with two-factor authentication enabled), and have Bluetooth and Wi-Fi switched on. Aside from the operating system requirement, you’ll probably have all that set up anyway.

Apple’s iPhone Mirroring app immediately starts on the front foot because it feels so much more intuitive than Phone Link. Aside from not requiring any fiddly pairing steps, the fact that it shows your mocked-up iPhone exactly as it is in reality means you instinctively know how to use it and where to find everything. No rummaging around in menus and tweaking settings here.

You can swipe through apps and screens using your mouse or a trackpad, then type directly into apps using your keyboard. Your iPhone notifications appear on your Mac just like macOS alerts (with sounds playing through your Mac speakers, not those of your iPhone), and you can move the iPhone mockup around your screen however you want.


Previous


Next

1 of 2

The iPhone Mirroring app in macOS Sequoia, showing a mocked-up iPhone on the Mac's display.

Digital Trends

The iPhone Mirroring app in macOS Sequoia, showing a mocked-up iPhone on the Mac's display.

Digital Trends

Don’t get me wrong here, iPhone Mirroring is not perfect. I had a lot of trouble with scrolling, as sometimes it just wouldn’t work at all (especially vertical scrolling using a wireless mouse), while my favorite iPhone Mirroring feature — dragging and dropping files from one device to another — is totally absent at the moment. Annoyingly, you also can’t resize the iPhone preview. And sure, the Phone Link experience is probably better with an Android device than with an iPhone.

But I can’t cut Microsoft too much slack because the experience is already so terrible compared to iPhone Mirroring. Even in its earliest beta condition, iPhone Mirroring is already leagues ahead of Phone Link in terms of design, functionality and reliability, and that gap is only going to widen as Apple updates its beta software.

It’s left me wishing for something much better on Windows but, given how slipshod Phone Link has been for years, I’m not exactly getting my hopes up.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • The macOS Sequoia public beta just launched. Here’s how to download it

  • Don’t wait for macOS Sequoia. This app already has its best feature

  • Apple just Sherlocked another beloved Mac app

  • 4 high-end features Windows laptops still have over MacBooks

  • Here are 5 macOS 15 features that I can’t wait to see




Latest posts

Judge puts a one-year limit on Google’s contracts for default search placement

A federal judge has expanded on the remedies decided for the Department of Justice's antitrust case against Google, ruling in favor of putting a...

This Chinese chip giant is boosting production to try and take on Nvidia – but how will Huawei feel?

Cambricon plans to produce 500,000 AI accelerator chips next yearThe Siyuan 590 and 690 models account for 300,000 unitsCurrent yield rates remain extremely low...

The bad news continues – server prices set to rise in latest blow to hardware budgets

AI-focused memory production is limiting availability for consumer hardwareDRAM costs are climbing faster than most manufacturers anticipatedDell and Lenovo announce double-digit price increases for...

Windows 11 still can’t topple its older sibling – usage stats show Windows 10 remains mind-bogglingly popular

Windows 10 still powers over two in five active desktops worldwideEnterprises delay upgrades through paid security extensions for critical systemsConsumers keep older PCs active...

The Nintendo Switch 2 and Ninja’s Creami are the best deals of the week

It’s a great time to consider buying Nintendo’s latest console. | Photo: Cameron Faulkner / The Verge Cyber week has just about wrapped up, but...

Apple’s chip chief might be the next exec to leave

Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman is reporting that Johny Srouji, senior vice president of hardware technologies, told Tim Cook he is “seriously considering” leaving Apple for...

Meta plans to push back the debut of its next mixed reality glasses to 2027

The big reveal for Meta's next mixed reality glasses is being postponed until the first half of 2027, according to a report from Business...

Waymo’s robotaxi fleet is being recalled again, this time for failing to stop for school buses

To prevent its robotaxi fleet from passing stopped school buses, Waymo is issuing another software recall in 2025. While it's not a traditional recall...

Apple’s Johny Srouji could continue the company’s executive exodus, according to report

Apple's Johny Srouji may be the latest company executive to seek greener pastures, according to a report from Bloomberg. The report said that Srouji,...

This super-compact budget desktop amp/DAC can replace a mini hi-fi stack, and it’s perfect for budding audiophiles

New Mesh DAC delivers the same digital filter as the firm's flagshipsMore than enough power for almost any headphones$199, or $209 if you want...