Experience fast and secure screen sharing both offline and on the go. Offering seamless experience to share your screen with others, anytime and anywhere!
Designed with simplicity first. No bloat, no subscriptions, no tracking — just screen sharing that works.
"I recently discovered ScreenTask and I'm so happy I did! It's been a great way to share my screen with teammates and clients alike. The video quality is always top notch. Highly recommend!"
"I've been using ScreenTask for 3 years now and it's been a great experience. The setup was quick and easy, and the quality of the screen sharing is really good. Perfect App!"
"ScreenTask has been a lifesaver for our team. We're able to quickly and easily share our screens and collaborate on projects in real-time. The app is intuitive and easy to use."
Opening image A single USB cable becomes a lifeline, its braided sheath catching neon light as it snakes toward a compact chipset labeled MT6781 — a quiet titan beneath a consumer screen. In the background, a laptop's terminal window glows with scrolling logs; each line a heartbeat: partitions mounted, scatter file parsed, download agent ready. Scene 1 — The Pact Two technicians lean over a cluttered bench. One, steady-handed, launches SP Flash Tool; the other watches the phone’s bootloader loop. They exchange a nod — an unspoken pact: recovery at any cost. On screen, “Format + Download” sits between promise and peril. The SP Flash Tool GUI is simple but consequential: scatter file, DA, preloader. Choices here are invitations or traps. Scene 2 — Anatomy of MT6781 Cut to a macro view of the chip: octa-core domains, modem islands, secure enclaves. Labels float like constellations — boot0, boot1, preloader, lk, recovery, system, vendor. Each region stores identity and behavior; each flash is an act of rewriting memory and fate. MT6781’s fingerprint determines which blobs fit, which drivers bind, and which signals coax the device back to life. Scene 3 — The Tool’s Ritual A ritual unfolds — scatter file loaded, DA selected, VCOM drivers recognized. The tool speaks in colors: yellow for caution, red for failure, green for success. Timing matters: the user presses the volume key combo; the phone enters BROM; the DA handshakes. Flows of bytes travel like metaphors — binary prayers to an indifferent silicon deity. The tool’s progress bar advances: 0% to 100% — a compressed arc of tension. Scene 4 — The Edge Cases Errors appear like ghosts: S_BROM_CMD_STARTCMD_FAIL, STATUS_DA_HASH_VERIFY_FAIL, or a stubborn “PMT change for the ROM; Download Only?” There are choices: force format, backup EFS first, extract auth file, or walk away. A dead battery, an unsigned boot image, or a mismatched scatter file can turn resurrection into permanent cold storage. Scene 5 — The Ethics and Exclusivity “Exclusive” implies restricted knowledge and guarded binaries. Signed bootloaders and vendor-authenticated images can restrict the craft to insiders. For good: exclusivity protects user security and device integrity. For ill: it gates repair, forces vendor service, and spawns grey-market tools. The SP Flash Tool itself is both utility and scalpel — empowering repair, enabling modification, and, in the wrong hands, facilitating misuse. Scene 6 — A Moment of Triumph A chime. The device reboots, logo blooms, Android stretches awake. The technicians exchange exhausted smiles. Data intact where promised; IMEI restored; network bars return. The tension dissipates into a small, bright victory: a reclaimed device, a saved set of memories, a problem solved through precise, patient tooling. Coda — A Warning and a Promise The final lines read like an oath carved into the workbench: respect the boot chain, verify scatter and firmware, back up critical partitions, and never flash blindly. Tools grant power; responsibility must follow. MT6781 and SP Flash Tool together are an instrument of repair and control — their exclusivity shaped not only by code signing and drivers, but by the skill and ethics of those who wield them. Final image The USB cable coils back into the drawer. The laptop’s log fades; the terminal cursor blinks, waiting for the next call to wake a sleeping system.
ScreenTask is a passion project by Eslam Hamouda for simple, reliable local network screen sharing without internet dependency.
Started in 2015 with a focus on simplicity and reliability, ScreenTask has grown through active community contributions into a trusted tool for teams and individuals who need offline screen sharing that just works.
Free to download, free to use, free forever. Pick your platform and start sharing in minutes.
A community-maintained cross-platform version written in Java, bringing ScreenTask to Linux and macOS. Requires the Java Runtime Environment.
Join thousands of users who rely on ScreenTask for fast, offline screen sharing. No signup, no cost, no limits.