Most of the time, yes — your deshi net can be cast to a smart TV, but the exact way depends on the app and the gear you own. I’ve had nights where I wanted to binge a show on the big screen and it worked flawlessly, and other nights where DRM, app limitations, or my messy home network turned it into a mini battle. The basic idea: if the deshi net app exposes a casting protocol like Chromecast, AirPlay, DLNA, or Miracast, you’ll see a cast
Icon inside the player or be able to mirror your device screen. On Android, many apps let you hit the cast icon or use the system’s built-in Cast feature. On iPhone/iPad, look for AirPlay or allow local network access in settings so the TV or an Apple TV can appear.
If the app doesn’t support native casting, there are fair workarounds. Casting a Chrome browser tab from a laptop works well for many streams, and apps like VLC or local DLNA servers can bridge content to TVs that support media rendering. For stubborn cases, a cheap Chromecast, Fire TV stick, Apple TV, or a Roku box will handle a lot of formats and make casting smoother. Do note that protected content may refuse to cast or reduce resolution: services that require Widevine L1 or PlayReady might block casting or cap to SD if the TV or dongle doesn’t meet their DRM needs.
Practical tips from my own trials: make sure phone/PC and TV are on the same Wi‑Fi band, disable VPNs when casting, update the deshi net app, and reboot router or devices if discovery fails. If subtitles or audio channels misbehave, try casting from a different device or using HDMI as a fallback. All in all, it’s usually possible — when it works, it’s glorious to watch on a proper screen.