I would like to suggest Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io) as another suitable alternative.
DISCLAIMER: I am the author.
AirMore looks nice, but it is browser-based. The alternative, Feem v4, works "natively" on all platforms.
Even though this means you have to install another app on your PC, here's what you get in return:
We are constantly improving the app. Let us know if you have any issues.
There's also Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Feem transfers files over your local Wi-Fi between Mac and Android (and Linux, Windows, iOS, WinRT)
Feem also supports Wi-Fi Direct between devices for faster transfer speeds.
Try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io).
Works across all platforms. Resumable file transfers with encryption.
You can activate Wi-Fi Direct on the Nexus 6P with Feem and connect your iPhone to the new Wi-Fi generated on your Nexus 6P.
No Internet. No Servers. Super fast.
Oh, and Feem for iOS has in-built support for the major video formats. So it will play any video format you transfer.
For unlimited, secure (TLS), and fast local file transfers, try Feem v4. (http://www.feem.io).
It works great on all platforms (native), and you can use it to send folders between your devices.
On the downside, you have to install Feem on all of your devices. Also, Feem doesn't (yet) support mirroring and notifications.
Disclaimer: I am the author.
Try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Encrypted, cross-platform resumable file transfers with Wi-Fi Direct.
You can send folders and the resumable file transfer feature is extremely important when sending heavy files to prevent duplication, or when the connection breaks in the middle for some reason.
Oh, plus Feem has built-in local chat to send links between your devices.
Try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Works on all platforms. Encrypted secure file and folder transfers with resumable downloads. Works with your Wi-Fi router or Wi-Fi Direct. Oh and one last thing, you can share text messages between your devices.
Only con is the UI is not (Yet) as beautiful as that of ShareIt or Xender on android. Other than that, it works great across all platforms.
I'm the author. Let me know if it works for you.
Try my app Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Maybe it can help you with the issue you are facing.
Once you transfer files from PC to iPad, you can use Feem's "open in other app.." to transfer the file to any other app.
You should try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Faster, and more reliable than AirDrop. Oh and it works across all platforms. Your images will transfer in the original quality without cropping or compression.
You can also try Feem v4 here (http://www.feem.io).
Feem auto resumes interrupted file transfers, and allows you to watch (all) video types. Feem is also intelligent enough to avoid duplicates. Feem is even faster when you use it's Wi-Fi direct option or use your phone as a hotspot.
Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io) might help, though it was not specifically designed for transferring thousands of files at a time. Also, Feem won't transfer contacts.
The one advantage Feem will have is resumable file transfers. Say you transfer your songs and halfway the transfer interrupts. When you resume your file transfer, Feem will only transfer the portion it didn't transfer before. No duplicates.
Use the wi-fi direct function for faster file transfers.
You can also use a USB cable. Faster (but sometimes less convenient) than any app, especially for thousands of files.
> If you use this app , Don't forget to disable some unnecessary permissions like location , camera & contacts or simply use old version from apk mirror - Xender
Or just use Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Feem works like Xender. Without the unnecessary permissions.
Feem also supports folder transfers across multiple platforms (even Linux).
You can also send text messages offline between your devices using Feem.
Oh, and one more thing. File transfers with Feem are encrypted over the local network.
Use Feem v4 instead (http://www.feem.io). All the PROs of Xender, without the Cons.
Feem v4.2 is launching next week with a web interface for PC. For now, the PC version needs Feem for PC. This helps you transfer folders and resume interrupted downloads.
Checkout our detailed comparison between Xender, ShareIt and Feem here: https://feemhq.wordpress.com/2016/10/16/shareit-vs-xender/
Try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io).
Simple, fast, reliable. We don't do any of the data stealing crap that ShareIT and Xender do. Oh and we work on all platforms... including Linux. Not to mention our file transfers are encrypted by default... even on your LAN.
Feel free to checkout our detailed (slightly biased) comparison between Feem, Shareit, and Xender in this blogpost: https://feemhq.wordpress.com/2016/10/16/shareit-vs-xender/
Hope this helps.
Try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). Simple, fast, reliable. Feel free to checkout our detailed (slightly biased) comparison between Feem, Shareit, and Xender in this blogpost: https://feemhq.wordpress.com/2016/10/16/shareit-vs-xender/
Portal is a polished product, backed by a great team. But I find Portal very limiting.
(Disclaimer: I run a competing service).
You can only send files offline from PC to phone. Don't you sometimes wish you could send files offline from phone to phone or PC to PC ?
You can only send files. Don't you sometimes wish you could also send folders offline?
You cannot resume file transfers. Any interrupted file transfer needs to be restarted from the very first byte. Any file you already sent gets duplicated. Wouldn't it be great if Portal intelligently detected a file was already transferred?
You cannot use Portal to send text messages (or links) to your other devices. One could argue there is pushbullet for that. But pushbullet works online, meanwhile portal's appeal is that it works offline.
Declining support from the pushbullet team. Portal is not pushbullet's main product. Pushbullet consists of talented individuals who need to maximize their limited time and support on their main revenue source (which is not Portal).
You absolutely need an external Wi-Fi router for Portal to work. Wouldn't it be great if Portal worked with your smartphone's tethered hotspot?
To the best of my knowledge, Portal doesn't encrypt file transfers between devices in a LAN. I might be wrong. Wouldn't it be great if your file transfers were encrypted even within a LAN ?
I know you are happy Portal user, and it does exactly what it says it does... Send files from PC to phone. But if you've faced any of the 7 pain points mentioned above, then you should try Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). The only downside is you have to install Feem on your PC. (Does not work on the browser). On the plus side, Feem solves all the 7 pain points above. You should give it a try.
You should try Feem v4. (http://www.feem.io)
Disclaimer, I am the author.
Here's what we do better than airdroid.
On the other hand,
That said, I personally think Feem v4 is the best way to transfer your .apk files from PC to Phone over Wi-Fi. Let me know if you face any issues.
Really? You're still going with the secretive approach? That really, really doesn't make you any more trustworthy than AirDroid.
Your service requires you to be 100% up front and 100% transparent.
If there is a pro-option I want to know what it does and I generally purchase it. I also want to know the limitations of the free version beforehand and I want to know about the pricing.
This is the pricing website you are trying to hide for some inexplicable reason:
http://www.feem.io/feem_pro_universal/
It still so terribly vague and doesn't answer most questions.
I assume it is account bound and platform independent?
I assume those are one time fees not a recurring subscription?
Will I get future versions and features for free or will I have to pay again?
What on earth is the difference between the pro and the free version? Does the free version have ads and limitations on chat and file transfer? Will it in the future?
What's the difference between the personal and family plan? How exactly is the security worse if I only pay $4.99 rather than $9.99?
Can I share the family plan with my wife, do I really need it or will the personal one suffice for that?
Nah, sorry, after all of this I certainly no longer have the feeling that I can trust Feem with my private data.
A great alternative to AirDrop on Apple devices (and other platforms for that matter) is Feem v4 (http://www.feem.io). It uses your existing Wi-Fi network to transfer files without passing through the Internet, completely offline. It might work better for you.