Figuring out the cloud and home networking is, to the average person, a bit like reading an essay on the latest innovations in brain surgery. Many of our gadgets might be smart, but the people using them, myself included, are often baffled when it comes to getting those devices to talk to each other.
Even something that should be easy, like sharing our own photos between friends and their gadgets, can be confusing, leading people to resort to emailing stuff to someone who’s in the same room. A Korean startup is trying to make this easier with a free app called ShareOn.
“Sure, Airdrop works great between iPhones and Macs, but sharing files between iOS and Android has always been a hassle,” says Anton Eliasson, the Swedish PR guy at the Korean startup, called Spika, that makes ShareOn. ShareOn adds PCs into the mix, and a version for Mac OS X is in the works. There isn’t a dedicated app for smart TVs, but the app – available for iOS and Android – should detect any smart TVs in the room that use the DLNA protocol.
ShareOn zaps photos, videos, and music files between devices. It requires a free sign-up, but after that it’s fairly simple – and a lot easier than most home networking set-ups involving routers, bridges, and goodness knows what. “The files themselves are not uploaded to the server. How ShareOn works is that it creates a direct connection between the different devices,” explains Eliasson. “The only information that goes through our server is account, file size, name, etc., not the files themselves. This information is encrypted partially at the moment and will be fully encrypted soon and is deleted after seven days.”
In my test using ShareOn on an iPhone and a Nexus 7, it was pretty straightforward to get, for example, all of my iPhone photos from the Camera Roll to show up on my Nexus 7 – and it only took a minute for all of them to show up on my tablet.
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