The Motorola Razr Fold is now the first Motorola phone to support AirDrop-style file sharing with Apple devices through Google’s Quick Share
OnePlus 15 users can now send files to nearby iPhones, iPads, and Macs through Quick Share, cutting out older workarounds like cloud links and third-party apps.
A developer has built a working Quick Share implementation for Android devices that don’t have Google Play Services.
Google’s AirDrop support is already live on Pixel and Galaxy S26 phones, with older Samsung flagships and select OnePlus, Oppo, and Honor models coming later.
Android to iPhone transfers are starting to feel less like chaos and more like copy, paste, done.
For years, moving a file between my iPhone, Android phone, and MacBook felt like negotiating a peace treaty between rival nations. Somehow, without much fanfare, the war is over — and my workflow has never been calmer.
Nothing has revived Warp after a short takedown, but since the app is no longer on the Play Store, users now have to install it manually from Nothing’s community site.
A leaked Android interface shows Google working on tap-to-share file transfers, with phone overlap, NFC quirks, and Android 17 timing all pointing to a more direct answer to AirDrop-style sharing.
Samsung’s AirDrop rollout is broader than expected, with mid-range Galaxy A-series phones confirmed to receive iPhone file-sharing support via a Quick Share update.
Samsung supporting AirDrop the Galaxy S26 is the kind of upgrade people will appreciate instantly and buy a phone for almost never.