Quick Share may soon be enabled by default on every Chromebook

Soon when you set up a new Chromebook, you may not need to manually enable Quick Share anymore.

Quick Share may soon be enabled by default on every Chromebook
  • A new Chrome OS flag has appeared that enables the Quick Share feature by default.
  • Quick Share is Google’s local file sharing service that works between Android, Chrome OS, and Windows.
  • The visibility setting will default to “Your Devices,” meaning you’ll only be able to share files with your own devices, but this can be changed.

Moving files between your Android phone and Chromebook is really simple, thanks to Quick Share. Quick Share is Samsung’s and Google’s file-sharing service that lets you transfer any number of files, both small and large, over a local network connection, meaning your files don’t pass through the cloud. Although enabling Quick Share on Chrome OS is quite easy, Google is preparing to enable it by default anyway to increase its adoption.

Quick Share has been available on Chromebooks since Chrome OS version 91 was released in June 2021, back when the feature was still called Nearby Share. Over the years, it has received updates that added a touch of Material You design to the sharing screens and introduced Self-Share to remove the confirmation when sharing files with your own devices. Google now has plans for an overhaul of Quick Share for Chrome OS, which not only includes enabling the feature by default but also removing the Selected Contacts visibility.