mkckr0 is a small, GitHub-hosted publisher that focuses on experimental networking utilities bridging desktop and mobile environments. Its single public offering, Audio Share, turns any Android handset into a wireless remote speaker for a Windows or Linux workstation: the PC encodes live system audio into Opus packets and streams them over TCP, while the companion Android client decodes and plays the feed with latency low enough for everyday desktop notifications, music, or conference calls. Typical use-cases include giving life to an old phone as a makeshift Bluetooth replacement, adding extra volume to a laptop with weak drivers, or routing game audio to a headset across the room without cables. The utility sits in the system tray, exposes configurable bitrate and port settings, and requires no driver installation on the desktop side; on Android the lightweight client requests only network and audio permissions. Because the entire stack is open-source, hobbyists often fork it to embed custom codecs or to adapt the protocol for Raspberry Pi media servers. mkckr0’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the latest upstream build, and can be queued alongside other applications for unattended batch installation.

Audio Share

Audio Share can share Windows/Linux computer's audio to Android phone over network, so your phone becomes the speaker of computer. (You needn't buy a new speaker.

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