My Windows laptop has a shoddy microphone. I can connect my iPhone to my laptop via USB; I'm not asking about Bluetooth. I fancy speaking to my phone's audio input as if it were a mic.
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1Title says iPhone, question body says Android - which is it? – Tetsujin Mar 04 '20 at 10:04
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I'm just curious as to why getting an inexpensive USB microphone was overlooked. – Allan Mar 04 '20 at 11:28
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I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the question body mentions an Android phone twice, whilst the Title says iPhone. Android wins by numerical superiority. – IconDaemon Mar 04 '20 at 14:29
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@Tetsujin Sorry! Corrected. – Mar 05 '20 at 10:38
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You'll need a "microphone app" to be able to do that. That could for example be the "Wo Mic" or the "Ez-Mic" apps:

jksoegaard
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The ez-mic link causes Firefox to issue a security warning about the site specifically the certificate. It may be a simple oversight by the dev but for me, it's red flag and I would avoid it. – Allan Mar 04 '20 at 11:31
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The certificate expired recently - seems like just an oversight. In any case, you can download the app from the App Store for a free 30 minute trial. Personally I would prefer the Wo Mic app I listed first. – jksoegaard Mar 04 '20 at 12:19