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Apple’s AirDrop, a key tool for Hong Kong protestors, is coming to Android

Abacus

發布於 2019年08月20日00:08 • Karen Chiu

Chinese smartphone rivals Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo team up to introduce peer-to-peer wireless file transfers

Since Apple introduced AirDrop in 2011, it's become a key tool for iPhone users to send files of any size to each other without using an internet connection or cell service. Now it looks like three Chinese phone makers are bringing that to Android users as well.

Xiaomi said in a WeChat post that it's partnering with Oppo and Vivo -- both owned by BBK Electronics -- to launch a wireless peer-to-peer file transfer protocol that will be compatible with devices from all three companies.

Incidentally, it comes as AirDrop has emerged as a protest tool for young Hong Kong activists. On subways and in other public places, unwitting iPhone users are receiving unsolicited images via AirDrop, inviting them to join in the protests.

It's an effective tool because it doesn't need people to have a particular app. Anyone with an iPhone can receive things via AirDrop, which means that they're even reaching tourists from mainland China. Normally blocked from reading uncensored news about the Hong Kong protests at home, Chinese tourists reportedly encountered these surprise AirDrops while visiting Hong Kong.

According to Xiaomi's blog post, their new feature relies partly on Bluetooth and can achieve a transfer rate of 20MB per second. Similarly, Apple's AirDrop uses Bluetooth to sense other Apple devices nearby and uses Wi-Fi to establish an encrypted connection between them. And just like AirDrop, Xiaomi indicates that the feature will support various file types, including images, music and videos.

The feature will be open for beta testing later this month, but it won't be the first time that Android users have an AirDrop-style service. The same year that Apple launched AirDrop, Google also introduced Android Beam with Android 4.0 (aka Ice Cream Sandwich). Unlike AirDrop, though, Beam is based on NFC and requires users to hold their phones next to each other to establish a connection.

Google announced this year that it was killing Beam, which won't be included in the next version of the operating system. However, Google still offers an app called Files by Google. Two users who both have the app installed on their phones can use it to share files offline, again using a combination of Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. Google is also reportedly working on another file transfer protocol called Fast Share.

The collaboration between Xiaomi, Vivo and Oppo is a rare tie-up among Chinese smartphone competitors, though it's easy to understand why Xiaomi might want to team up with rivals in this case.

Xiaomi only controlled about 12% of the Chinese smartphone market and less than 10% of the global market in the last quarter, according to IDC. If the file transfer feature were only available on Xiaomi devices, it would have pretty limited use.

Together with Oppo and Vivo, on the other hand, the three giants cover nearly half of China's smartphone market.

Notably, the current partnership doesn't include Huawei, the country's dominant industry leader. Xiaomi, though, has said it looks forward to collaborating with more partners, which leaves open the possibility for more brands to include the new feature in the future.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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