Microsoft is reportedly testing major changes to Windows 11 designed to speed up the OS, reduce clutter, and expand functionality — including deeper integration between Galaxy phones and Galaxy Book laptops. These prototype features aim to make Android-to-PC interaction more direct and productive.
Galaxy phone: more phone activity surfaced in the Start menu
Instead of forcing users to open the Phone Link app, Windows could surface more phone-originated activities directly in the Start menu. Hovering over these entries would reveal richer details — for example, the full content of a message — without opening a dedicated app. The change would make accessing notifications and files faster and less disruptive.
A phone icon and quick-control flyout in the taskbar
When an Android phone is connected, Windows might show a dedicated phone icon in the taskbar. Clicking it would open a contextual flyout with a snapshot of phone status and quick controls: Do Not Disturb, Find Phone, vibrate toggle, and similar options. The goal is to provide essential smartphone controls from the desktop without launching a full app window.
Clipboard history and a standalone Messages app for productivity
Currently, clipboard sync between Android and Windows only transfers the most recently copied item. Planned changes include syncing the full clipboard history, which would streamline workflows that rely on multiple text snippets. Microsoft is also said to be working on a standalone Messages app to display SMS and other phone messages; that app could be pinned to Start for direct access on a Galaxy Book.
What’s the rollout status?
All of these improvements are described as prototype-level and may change before any public release. There’s no known deployment timeline, and none of the proposals are guaranteed to ship as-is.
Taken together, these updates fit Microsoft’s broader goal of making Windows 11 faster and less cluttered while narrowing the gap between PC and smartphone. For Galaxy phone and Galaxy Book owners, they could deliver a noticeably smoother cross-device experience if Microsoft moves the prototypes into a public build.

