Google's Quick Share (formerly Nearby Share) only works between Android devices. Need to send a file to an iPhone or Mac? You need something else.
chirpfile vs Nearby Share
chirpfileQuick Share
Works on iPhoneYesNo
Works on MacYesNo
Works on WindowsYesYes (app)
Cross-network (different WiFi)YesNo
No app installYesBuilt-in (Android)
No Bluetooth requiredYesRequired
No location services requiredYesRequired
End-to-end encryptedAES-128-GCMYes
File deleted after transferYesSaved to device
When Nearby Share fails
Android to iPhone
Quick Share doesn't support Apple devices at all. There's no workaround. chirpfile works between any two browsers.
Devices not finding each other
Quick Share needs Bluetooth, location services, and the same WiFi network. Turn off any one of those and discovery breaks. chirpfile just needs internet on both devices.
Corporate or public WiFi
Networks with device isolation block Quick Share's discovery protocol. chirpfile uses an encrypted relay that works through any network restriction.
"Couldn't share" error
Common when devices lose the peer-to-peer connection mid-transfer. chirpfile uploads the encrypted file first, then the other device downloads it. No fragile direct connection to break.
Try it now
Open chirpfile.com on two devices and send a file.
No. Quick Share (formerly Nearby Share) only supports Android and Chrome OS. There is no iPhone version and Google has not announced plans for one.
Why is Nearby Share not finding devices?
It requires Bluetooth on, location services enabled, and both devices on the same WiFi. Some phones also need the screen to be on and unlocked. chirpfile doesn't need any of that.
What happened to Nearby Share?
Google renamed it to Quick Share in early 2024. Same technology, same limitations. Still Android and Chrome OS only.
Is chirpfile free?
Free for files up to 15 MB. Pro ($0.99/day or $4.99/month) supports files up to 1 GB.