AirDrop Support Rolling Out to Samsung Galaxy S26 Devices This Week - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

AirDrop Support Rolling Out to Samsung Galaxy S26 Devices This Week

AirDrop support is coming to Samsung's Quick Share feature on Galaxy S26 devices this week, allowing owners to directly share files and media with iPhones and Macs.

samsung galaxy s26 new purple
In a Sunday newsroom announcement, Samsung said the rollout is starting today in Korea, with devices in the U.S. to follow later this week. The feature will expand to more regions and on more Galaxy devices at a later date, including Canada, Latin America, Europe, Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Taiwan.

Owners of Galaxy S26, S26 Plus, and S26 Ultra devices will need to enable the feature in their phone's Quick Share settings menu, using a new Share with Apple devices toggle.

Last November, Google announced Quick Share compatibility with AirDrop on Pixel phones. The feature was initially limited to the newest Pixel 10 devices, but has since been expanded to the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, and Pixel 9 Pro Fold.

Popular Stories

Foldable iPhone 2023 Feature Iridescent 1

Apple Approves Production of OLED Panels for Foldable iPhone

Monday June 22, 2026 8:00 am PDT by
Samsung Display has received Apple's approval to begin module production of OLED panels for Apple's first foldable iPhone, according to a report today from TheElec. Citing industry sources, the report says Samsung Display has started operating part of its back-end production lines in Vietnam to fulfill an initial order of around three million panels scheduled for delivery this year. Module...
iCloud iPhone 17 Pro

iPhone Users Who Pay for iCloud Storage Get Two New Perks on iOS 27

Thursday July 2, 2026 6:10 am PDT by
If you pay for certain iCloud+ storage plans beyond the 5GB that Apple offers for free, you will receive two more perks on iOS 27 at no additional cost. A summary of the two new iCloud+ perks on iOS 27:Increased daily usage limits for some new Apple Intelligence features, including image generation in the revamped Image Playground app. HomeKit Secure Video cameras receive generated video...
iPhone 4 on Black Feature

Apple Facing One of Its Worst Leaks Since the iPhone 4

Thursday July 2, 2026 9:53 am PDT by
Apple supplier Tata Electronics recently suffered a cyberattack that resulted in thousands of confidential files being published on the dark web, and this reportedly included some photos and documents related to the upcoming iPhone 18 Pro. We have elected not to share any of the leaked photos in this story due to the illegal nature in which they were obtained, but they can easily be found...

Top Rated Comments

wohmiguel Avatar
15 weeks ago

Wish Apple just helped developing open standards, or at least established a reasonable period of exclusive usage of their technology and then let others in or adopt an open standard if it has caught up with their own.
I mean, the EU had to force them to drop their silly connector.
They have helped develop open standards. They helped with the development of USB-C, literally pioneered the acceptance of Wi-Fi, took part in creating the Matter smart home standard... does them wanting to have something for themselves with their own devices immediately downplay every other stride they've made?

These are features of convenience. They should be treated as such.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
HouseLannister Avatar
15 weeks ago

This is disgusting. Absolutely disgusting. This isn't a win for consumers, this sort of nonsense will actually discourage Apple from innovating. Whats the point if your technology is going to be stolen and copied anyway?
Might as well say you only want Macs to only access the Apple Internet and not the rest of the web. And iPhones should only be able to text other iPhones. Interoperability is a good thing.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
HouseLannister Avatar
15 weeks ago

EU didn't force something like that yet
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/11/the-eu-made-apple-adopt-new-wi-fi-standards-and-now-android-can-support-airdrop/
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cicalinarrot Avatar
15 weeks ago
Wish Apple just helped developing open standards, or at least established a reasonable period of exclusive usage of their technology and then let others in or adopt an open standard if it has caught up with their own.
I mean, the EU had to force them to drop their silly connector.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
winxmac Avatar
15 weeks ago

Surprised Apple didn't block this yet over privacy concerns
Apple will not be able to block this if the EU forced them to use an open standard for Apple devices which is why Google and Samsung are now able to integrate the AirDrop functionality that some/most android users are envious of.

There are still some Apple-exclusive features that cannot be replicated by its competition.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cicalinarrot Avatar
15 weeks ago

They have helped develop open standards. They helped with the development of USB-C, literally pioneered the acceptance of Wi-Fi, took part in creating the Matter smart home standard... does them wanting to have something for themselves with their own devices immediately downplay every other stride they've made?

These are features of convenience. They should be treated as such.
I said "just". I know very well they very often helped open standards grow and thrive. HTML5 over Flash is the best thing they've done to the world. I just wish that was their go-to solution. And that, when they decided that they have to get their own thing instead, it wasn't so heavily closed for so long.

But also, transferring files is not a feature of convenience at all, it's a fundamental feature of a multi-purpose electronic device. A very snappy and painless wireless method of transfer is a nice addition but... they've spend years making all alternatives absurdly painful.
It used to be the easiest thing on PCs and it's been artificially made very complicated on Apple devices because of how closed their environment is. Airplay feels like magic when it works but also like hell when it doesn't. And, again, until they've been forced to use USB-C, you needed a proprietary adapter to even use something like a USB pendrive. Which also was possible thanks to upgrades to get a half-decent internal memory browser.
Photo backup on a computer is still really, really bad. And it is because they want it to work poorly so that they can sell you iCloud (I don't feel like a conspiracy theorist, I've done this stuff for a living and there's basically no way to reliably transfer your photos to your Mac or PC without fighting to get it right. It makes no sense without considering iCloud).

I know they act differently with different features and I wish they had a standard. I don't want to find myself using for years something they developed as unique and cool but that grew old with time and locked me out of industry standards, as it happened with stuff like Lightning and Siri.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)