• CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 days ago

    Good stuff. It should theoretically be possible on any Android device with WiFi, by the way. Google is branding this as Pixel exclusive to push Pixel 10 sales.

    For context, AirDrop is a proprietary communication between Apple devices, but the EU forced them to open it up and adopt an open protocol called WiFi Aware. Apple did so but they didn’t make a big deal out of it. (Why would they? It still works 100% for all Apple devices.) So in theory, any Android device with WiFi should be able to use the system. But Google made it Pixel exclusive. Now they’re saying they’re going to make it an APK distributed via the Play Store to “certain” devices. But again, since the EU made Apple use an open protocol, any Android should be able to do it.

    There are two caveats. One, the Apple device’s OS must be 26 or higher. Before 26, they were numbered inconsistently, but last year, they all adopted version 26, named for the upcoming year (this year). So if the iPhone isn’t running iOS 26 (aka the Liquid Glass update — or Liquid Ass, depending on who you ask), it’s not going to work because that iPhone doesn’t support WiFi Aware. Two, if it’s an iPhone or iPad, AirDrop is either off or it’s on for contacts. And the contacts have to be Apple users. That’s 100% on Apple’s end. So the iPhone must be manually set to “everyone for 10 minutes” which, as the name implies, needs to be put back every 10 minutes. Macs however, are just on or off, none of this “10 minutes” bullshit.

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      12 days ago

      It should theoretically be possible on any Android device […] Google is branding this as Pixel exclusive to push Pixel

      The last decade of Android, summarized.

    • Markaos@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 days ago

      For context, AirDrop is a proprietary communication between Apple devices, but the EU forced them to open it up and adopt an open protocol called WiFi Aware.

      EU forced Apple to adopt WiFi Aware, but not to switch AirDrop to use it - the intended effect is that WiFi Aware is available to developers who can then create their own alternatives to AirDrop that are not locked to one OS.

      Also Pixel 10 series can currently share even to iPhones that never got the new iOS with WiFi Aware support, so claiming this is thanks to EU is absolute BS (although often repeated, for some weird reason). This is just AWDL (which was reverse engineered long ago btw, and there has even been an experimental implementation on Linux for years) + some reverse engineering of the actual AirDrop protocol implemented on top of it.