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Google is now reportedly piloting Fast Share, an AirDrop alternative
Google may be working on a new way to send files between devices without necessarily relying on the internet. This new feature, called Fast Share, may be intended to compete with Apple's AirDrop. Unlike Android Beam, it involves the instigation of Bluetooth connections.
New reports suggest that Google is working on a new way to enable file-sharing between devices. There may be a need for such feature, particularly on Android phones, that rivals others such as the AirDrop found on Apple devices. On the other hand, Android Beam, a setting built into many non-iOS phones by default, could also fit that bill. Unfortunately, other reports indicate that it will be phased out in the next major version of this OS.
Android Beam operates using the near-field communication (NFC) module found in many modern-day smartphones or tablets, and Thus offers the option of quick, convenient file-sharing que does not depend on an online connections.
Google's purported planned next generation of this concept, Fast Share, uses Bluetooth (and also GPS); However, it also reportedly sets up the Wi-Fi.
Google Fast Share is currently available as a beta of sorts, and had previously been picked up by 9to5Google, and by XDA soon thereafter. These outlets have demonstrated that it has a simple, intuitive interface - not hugely unlike AirDrop, in fact. It contains clear menus and pathways by which the user identifies and specifies the target for the file-share.
Then again, correspondents have noted that devices such as "iPhone", "smartwatch" and "Chromebook" are included among the default targets within this new interface. On the other hand, XDA contributors have also observed that the presence of the Google Play Services app is required to run the software involved. by Deirdre O Donnell
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