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[br][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"]you're already missing Android Beam and the way it allowed you to share links or files from your device to another easily, there's some good news and bad news all rolled up into one item: Google is planning on rolling out a new "Fast Share" protocol through a Play services updates that will allow Android devices to share assets to other devices, primarily using Bluetooth and Wi-Fi Direct connections.[/div][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"][br][/div][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"]9to5Google and XDA-Developers have unwrapped the new applet, screenshot by screenshot. Fast Share is essentially the sharing function found in the Files by Google app where users assign themselves a special device name for the purposes of using Fast Share, then scan for surrounding devices with Bluetooth before finally conducting the information transfer through Wi-Fi Direct.[/div][div align="center"][a href="https://c.mi.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=2270062&aid=4416275&from=album&page=1"][img id="aimg_4416275" width="776" height="505" src="https://u01.appmifile.com/images/2019/07/01/868c0f97-7436-4cf8-b3b1-21c5b7fde463.jpg" alt="Screenshot_2019-07-01-05-44-28-712_com.android.chrome.jpg" title="Screenshot_2019-07-01-05-44-28-712_com.android.chrome.jpg"][/a][/div][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"]The feature is denoted by the icon for the existing "Nearby" feature, which indicates local points of interest from Bluetooth beacons. Fast Share apparently has a dark theme, as depicted by the screenshots above, and looks to be running in a demo mode. Several preset "nearby devices" include a Chromebook, a Pixel 3, an iPhone, and a "smartwatch." Of course, by resorting to the same standard wireless relationships that Apple's own AirDrop does, moving files across devices of different platforms becomes a possibility — though with this being an unreleased service, it's wise not to assume what will go public.[/div][div align="center"][a href="https://c.mi.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=2270062&aid=4416276&from=album&page=1"][img id="aimg_4416276" width="776" height="771" src="https://u01.appmifile.com/images/2019/07/01/af53d316-12c8-4426-9b96-b2bbff5413a3.jpg" alt="Screenshot_2019-07-01-05-44-05-612_com.android.chrome.jpg" title="Screenshot_2019-07-01-05-44-05-612_com.android.chrome.jpg"][/a][/div][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"]On the other hand, you're going to face the same problems of anonymity that have led to perverts dropping pics to unsuspecting passengers on the train. There is a "Preferred Visibility" designation you can give to devices you frequently connect with. Then again, one of the big reasons why people miss Android Beam — and, for that matter, Samsung's S Beam, which utilized Wi-Fi Direct instead of Bluetooth for data transfer — is because of the certainty that a device tapping another device and initiating contact through NFC. No risk of device name spoofing, no random visual assaults, none of that.[/div][div align="left"][font size="4"][font color="#000000"][br][/div][h4][a href="https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/06/30/google-fast-sharing-android-beam-replacement/" target="_blank"]Source[/a][/h4] |
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