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Deskreen 2.0.4, released by developer Pavlo as the seventh iteration of the utility, is an open-source screen-sharing application that re-uses the local network to turn any nearby device equipped with a modern web browser—phones, tablets, smart-TVs, laptops, or even a Raspberry Pi—into a wireless secondary monitor for a Windows, macOS, or Linux host. After launching the program on the main computer, the user selects which desktop, individual application window, or entire display to stream; Deskreen then generates an end-to-end encrypted WebRTC link and QR code that the companion device opens in Chrome, Safari, Edge, Firefox, or any Chromium-based viewer. The receiver shows the shared feed in real time with audio pass-through, while the host retains full control over resolution, frame-rate, and clipboard synchronization, making the tool useful for extending a coding IDE to a tablet beside a laptop, mirroring a presentation from a conference PC to attendees’ phones, monitoring a render or build progress from the sofa, or giving a remote colleague a quick, view-only peek at a design without installing extra software. Because the connection stays completely local, no images touch external servers, satisfying privacy-minded professionals and corporate environments. The lightweight server occupies minimal CPU, supports multiple simultaneous viewers, and offers optional dark-mode, full-screen, and zoom presets on the client side. Deskreen is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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