Yes and no. In this context, either word feels correct to me. Rather than try to answer this myself, I'm going to quote a usage note from a dictionary:
"According to a traditional rule of grammar, 'better,' not 'best,' should be used in comparisons between two things: 'Which house of Congress has the better attendance record?' This rule is often ignored in practice, but it still has many devoted adherents. In certain fixed expressions, however, 'best' is used idiomatically for comparisons between two: 'Put your best foot forward.' 'May the best team win!'"
I think "It's best to..." is another example of one of these "fixed expressions." Gilgy is right, "It's best to" is an idiomatic phrase meaning "it's recommended..."
Notice the writer had just said
"It's best to use this tool on a desktop."
they would have been perfectly correct. We can use "best" even when there is nothing explicitly being compared.