How to Display Windows Desktop on a TV Using Chromecast

How to Display Windows Desktop on a TV Using Chromecast

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How to Display Windows Desktop on a TV Using Chromecast

Cast movies and more to your big screen

By Ian Paul Ian Paul Writer University of British Columbia Indiana University Bloomington Former freelance contributor Ian Paul is a widely published freelance tech writer specializing in Windows, virus protection, and VPNs. lifewire's editorial guidelines Updated on December 9, 2020 Reviewed by Christine Baker Reviewed by Christine Baker Christine Baker is a marketing consultant with experience working for a variety of clients. Her expertise includes social media, web development, and graphic design. lifewire's editorial guidelines Tweet Share Email Tweet Share Email Streaming Devices Chromecast Roku Fire TV Apple TV

What to Know

In Chrome on a Windows computer, select the three-dot menu icon.Choose Cast > Cast Desktop and select the name of your Chromecast to display the desktop on your TV.Choose Cast > Select source > Cast tab, then select the nickname of the Chromecast to cast the active tab in Chrome. This article explains how to display the Windows desktop on a TV using Chromecast. It includes information for casting only a Chrome browser tab and for using casting services.

How to Cast Your Desktop

To display your entire computer desktop on your TV via Chromecast, your Windows computer and Chromecast device must be on the same Wi-Fi network. Open the Chrome browser on the computer and then: Select the three-dot menu icon in the upper right corner of Chrome and choose Cast. Select Cast desktop and then choose your Chromecast's nickname in the device list. After a few seconds, your desktop starts casting. If you have a multi-monitor display set-up, Chromecast asks you to choose the screen you want to display. Choose the correct screen, select Share, and the correct display appears on your TV. When you cast your entire desktop, your computer’s audio comes along with it. If you don’t want that to happen, either turn off the audio that is playing on your desktop—iTunes, Windows Media Player, etc.—or turn down the volume using the slider in the Chrome Mirroring window. To stop casting the desktop, select the blue Chromecast icon in the browser. When the Chrome Mirroring window appears, select Stop.

What Desktop Casting Is Good For

Casting your desktop works well for static items like a slideshow of photos saved to your hard drive or a PowerPoint presentation. As with casting a tab, casting video isn’t great. If you want to play a video on your television, either hook up your PC directly via HDMI or use a service built for streaming video over your home Wi-Fi network such as Plex.

How to Cast a Chrome Browser Tab

You can also cast a single tab from the Google Chrome web browser. Open Chrome on your computer and navigate to the website you want to display on your TV. Select the three-dot menu icon in the upper right corner and select Cast from the drop-down menu. A small window appears with the names of any cast-friendly devices on your network, such as a Chromecast or Google Home smart speaker. Before you pick your device, though, press the downward facing arrow at the top, then the small window says Select source. Choose Cast tab and select the nickname of the Chromecast. When it’s connected, the window says Chrome Mirroring along with a volume slider and the name of the tab you have open. Once a tab is casting you can navigate to a different website, and it will keep displaying whatever is on that tab. Look up at your TV and you’ll see the tab taking up the entire screen—though usually in letterbox mode to keep the viewing ratio correct. To stop casting, close the tab or click the Chromecast icon in your browser to the right of the address bar (it’s blue). That brings back the Chrome Mirroring window. Now click Stop in the lower right corner.

What Tab Casting Works Well For

Casting a Chrome browser tab is ideal for anything that’s mostly static, such as vacation photos stashed in Dropbox, OneDrive, or Google Drive. It’s also good for viewing a website at a larger scale, or even for displaying a presentation PowerPoint online or Google Drive’s Presentation web app. What it doesn’t work as well for is video. Well, kind of. If you are using something that already supports casting, like YouTube, it works just fine because the Chromecast can grab YouTube directly from the internet, and your tab becomes a remote control for YouTube on the TV. In other words, it's no longer broadcasting its tab to the Chromecast. Non-Chromecast supporting content, like Vimeo and Amazon Prime Video, is a little more problematic. In this case, you're streaming content directly from your browser tab to your television. To be honest, this doesn’t work well. It’s barely watchable, because you have to expect short stutters and skips as part of the bargain. It’s easy for Vimeo fans to fix this. Instead of casting from a PC tab, use the service’s mobile apps for Android and iOS, which do support Chromecast. Amazon Prime Video doesn't currently support Chromecast, however, you can get Prime Video on your TV via other streaming devices like Amazon’s $40 Fire TV Stick or Roku.

What Is Casting

Casting is a method of sending content wirelessly to your television, but it works in two different ways. You can cast content from a service that supports it like YouTube, which is actually telling Chromecast to go to the online source (YouTube) and fetch a particular video to play on the TV. The device that told Chromecast to do that (your phone, for example) then becomes a remote control to play, pause, fast forward, or choose another video. When you cast from your PC, though, you are mostly streaming content from your desktop to your TV over a local network with no help from an online service. That is different, because streaming from a desktop relies on the computing power of your home PC, while streaming YouTube or Netflix relies on the cloud.

Why Cast

Google’s $35 HDMI dongle is an affordable alternative to set-top boxes like Apple TV and Roku. Primarily, it allows you to view all kinds of content on a TV, including YouTube, Netflix, video games, and Facebook videos. But the Chromecast also helps you put two basic items from any PC running Chrome onto your TV: a browser tab or the full desktop. This feature works with the Chrome browser on any PC platform that supports it including Windows, Mac, GNU/Linux, and Google’s Chrome OS.

Casting Services Like Netflix YouTube and Facebook Video

Not a ton of services have built-in casting from the PC version of the web to the Chromecast. This is because a lot of services have already built it into their mobile apps on Android and iOS and haven’t bothered with laptops and desktops. Regardless, some services do support casting from the PC, notably Google’s own YouTube, Facebook, and Netflix. To cast from these services, start playing a video, and with the player controls, you’ll see the casting icon—the outline of a display with a Wi-Fi symbol in the corner. Select that, and the small window appears once again in your browser tab. Select the nickname for your Chromecast device, and the casting begins. The 10 Best Free Chromecast Apps For Android in 2022 Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Get the Latest Tech News Delivered Every Day Subscribe Tell us why! Other Not enough details Hard to understand Submit More from Lifewire How to Cast Apple TV to Chromecast How to Chromecast Amazon Prime Video How to Chromecast to a TV How to Download a Different Samsung TV Internet Browser How to Get a Browser on Chromecast How to Cast Google Photos Using Chromecast How to Connect Chromebook to Your TV How to Connect Your MacBook Air to a TV How to Mirror Android to TV (Connect Your Phone Wirelessly) How to Use Chromecast Without Wi-Fi How to Connect an iPad to a TV How to Chromecast to Multiple TVs Simultaneously How to Cast to Roku TV From Android How to AirPlay From a Mac to a TV How to Fix It When Chromecast Isn't Working How to Connect Disney Plus to Chromecast Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up By clicking “Accept All Cookies”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. Cookies Settings Accept All Cookies
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