How can I have a full control of a phone ? App and tricks please
Executive summary
Full, remote control of an Android phone is broadly achievable today using established remote‑access apps such as TeamViewer, AnyViewer, DeskIn and similar products that install a service on the target device and permit full input, file transfer and screen control [1] [2] [3]. By contrast, gaining “full control” of an iPhone from another platform is severely limited by Apple's security model: most tools can only mirror or view an iPhone screen or provide limited support features rather than full device takeover [1] [4] [5].
1. Android: the practical path to full remote control
For Android devices, multiple commercial remote‑access apps advertise true remote control—TeamViewer, AnyViewer, DeskIn, Iperius Remote and others can let a remote operator see the screen, send taps and keystrokes, transfer files and run apps once the remote client is installed and permissioned on the target device [6] [1] [3] [2]. Guides and vendor pages describe a typical workflow: install the support app on the phone to be controlled, run the controller app on the operator device, authenticate the session (often with PIN or account login), and maintain an Internet connection to sustain the session [6] [1] [2]. Vendors often promote encryption and device‑based PINs to reduce interception risk [7].
2. iPhone: screen sharing, not takeover, under Apple’s rules
Multiple overviews and support articles emphasize that iOS tightly restricts remote control: many cross‑platform products permit only screen sharing or limited support interactions on iPhone, not full remote input or background control, because of Apple’s OS protections [4] [1] [5]. Some tools offer workarounds—screen casting plus remote guidance or integrating within Apple’s ecosystem features like Apple TV Remote or AirPlay for content control—but these do not equate to full device control [8] [4].
3. “Tricks” in reporting: what is real and what vendors hype
Product marketing tends to conflate “remote support” with “full control,” and several vendor pages repeat claims of cross‑platform compatibility while also noting platform limitations—particularly for iOS—so readers should treat headline claims with scrutiny and read the fine print about what iPhones will actually allow [9] [10] [11]. Comparison sites and blogs list top‑9 or top‑5 remote apps and step‑by‑step setup guides, but those same pages also document that functionality differs by OS and that some features require explicit user consent and installed agents [2] [1].
4. Legitimate use cases and safer alternatives
Use cases cited across vendor and review pages include IT support, parental controls and remote access to one’s own devices; for families, cross‑platform parental solutions combine vendor apps, platform native tools and service‑level controls [7] [4]. When full control is not available or desirable, practical alternatives include screen sharing for training or troubleshooting, official ecosystem tools (Apple’s built‑in TV/airplay controls for media, or manufacturer remote apps for smart TVs), or Mobile Device Management solutions for institutional needs—topics these sources discuss in the context of feature limitations and platform compatibility [8] [11] [7].
5. How to proceed responsibly given platform constraints
The collected reporting makes clear that technical possibilities differ by platform and that available apps each document both capabilities and constraints: Android offers the widest set of full‑control apps, iOS generally restricts control to viewing or guided support, and vendors often add encryption and PIN checks to secure sessions [1] [3] [7] [4]. Where “full control” is required for legitimate reasons—device support, family management, or enterprise admin—choose established vendors, follow their setup guides carefully, and use built‑in safeguards such as session PINs and account verification that the vendors describe [6] [1] [7].