Asapha Halifa is an independent software publisher whose entire catalog is built around a single, tightly focused idea: turning any Android phone or tablet into a wireless loudspeaker for a Windows computer. The company’s solitary title, AudioRelay, accomplishes this by capturing system-level audio on the PC—music, game effects, voice chat, notification pings—and transmitting it over Wi-Fi or USB to the companion Android app with sub-second latency. Typical users are gamers who want to route surround cues to a spare handset, office workers who repurpose an old phone as a desktop speaker, or parents who pipe lullabies stored on a laptop to a baby monitor across the room. Because the utility installs a virtual sound device, it also doubles as a basic audio loopback tool for streamers who need to send mixed output to OBS without cables. Settings are minimal: bitrate, buffer size, and channel mode can be adjusted from a single pane, while the Android side offers an optional equalizer and automatic reconnection when the network drops. The publisher keeps the codebase lightweight, issuing frequent micro-releases that shave milliseconds off latency rather than adding ancillary features. Asapha Halifa’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where the package is pulled directly through the trusted winget repository, always delivers the newest build, and can be queued alongside any number of additional applications for unattended batch installation.

AudioRelay

AudioRelay is an application to stream every sound from your PC to one or multiple Android devices.

Details