Intel’s excellent Unison PC-to-phone app shuts down for good


Intel’s ambitious plan to link your laptop and call a single unified platform – Intel Unison – is dead, unless you have a particular PC brand.
The Intel union page notes that the program “will soon be interrupted” and a related basic knowledge of Intel knowledge also claims that the application has reached its end of life. Dell says it even more clearly: “The Intel Unison application is interrupted and will no longer work properly or will no longer be available for download after June 30, 2025.”
Intel had declared earlier this year that it planned to stop the application in unison, probably because the company tried to reduce costs in the middle of a slowdown which produced dismissals of the company and a recalibration reported in its manufacturing processes which will see its process 18A of next generation only for internal use.
For a while, the manufacturers of devices have been obsessed with the creation of mobile devices interacting with laptops. Dell’s mobile connection – which still seems alive for the moment – was an option. Intel Untise was another, and which was not confined to a specific apparatus manufacturer. Intel has boldly spoken that unison becomes not only an application, but a platform for cross-connectivity.
Microsoft, however, had other plans, with the application of your phone for Windows, which was then renamed Link Phone. Unison offered narrower connectivity between Windows and Apple iPhones that the telephone link originally, but the phone link covers all Windows PCs, and not just Windows PCs. The telephone link can not only supervise the messages and calls of the iPhone, but it is also integrated into the Windows start menu itself.
However, there is a PC supplier who will continue to use in unison: Lenovo. “Lenovo will have PCS will keep the service,” said Intel, apparently throughout the rest of the year.
These will have edition pcs will still use unison: the lenovo slim 7 14ill10, thinkpad x1 2-in-1 gen 10, thinkpad x1 carbon gen 13, thinkpad x9-14 gen 1, thinkpad x9-15 gen 1, yoga 9 2-in-1 14ill10, yoga pro 7 14iah h. 14ill10, and the yoga slim 7 15ill9.
Intel has once made a key characteristic of its EVO program for premium laptops. Although Evo D’Ill still seems to be alive, one of his sales arguments officially disappears.




